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14.1 General
Properties
Solutions are
homogenous mixtures. A homogenous
mixture is an equal distribution of
solution components.
A gaseous solution surrounds us
everyday and is
known as air. Even the water we drink
is a solution,
although many times water is said to be
purified. From
these statements you can see that a
solution can be in
a form other than liquid.
Certain properties hold true for all
solutions.
1) Solutions are homogenous mixtures.
2) Particles in solution are very
small.
3) Solutions are usually transparent
but can be colored.
4) Separation of the solute from the
solvent can be
done by physical means(evaporation).
Determining whether a substance is
soluble or not is tough.
However, some general rules are given
as an outline.
Many reference books are available for
solubility because
factors such as temperature, ion
interaction, size of ions,
and others complicate predictions.


14.2
Solubility/Related Factors
A
substance that is dissolved in another substance is
called a solute. The substance
the solute is being
dissolved in is the solvent.
Describing the amount of these
substances is the basis for solubility.
Solubility ranges
from very soluble, moderately soluble,
slightly soluble to
insoluble.
The general terms that describe whether
substances are
soluble or not are: miscible and
immiscible. Liquids that
dissolve in each other in all
proportions are miscible(exp:
salt in water). Liquids that do not
mix, such as oil and
water, are immiscible.
A substances ability to dissolve or not
is dependant on the
nature of both the solvent and solute.
Temperature and for
gases(pressure) also play important
roles. "Substances
with similar intermolecular forces tend
to be soluble in one
another". Polar and ionic
substances are soluble in other
polar substances. Nonpolar substances
solubilize in
nonpolar solvents. A major influence on
chemical equilibrium
is temperature. With some exceptions
the solubility of
solids increases with temperature.
Alternatively, gases in
liquids show a decrease in solubility
with an increase in
temperature. An example would be CO2
escaping from
a soda can or bottle. Another factor
that influences
solubility is pressure. The only
notable effect is that of
gases in liquid, such as, when your
soda goes flat. If the
gas over a solution is doubled the
amount of gas that is
dissolved in the solution is doubled.

14.3 Rate of
Dissolving Solids
Four
factors govern the rate at which a substance
dissolves:
1) Size of the
particle- the smaller the surface area the
easier the dissolution.
2) Temperature-
usually a increase in temperature will
increase solubility. Kinetic energy
increases with increased
temperature.
3) Solution
concentration- As the solute is added to
solvent and the saturated state is
reached , the rate of
dissolution decreases.
4) Mixing or
agitating- Mixing the solute causes an
increase in the kinetic forces as well
as a increased
interaction between solute-solvent.
The amount of solute that can be
dissolved in solvent can
be saturated, unsaturated, or
supersaturated. A saturated
solution is one that at a given
temperature, is at its limit
as to the amount of solute that will
dissolve. Unsaturated
solutions are capable of dissolving
more solute without
altering the conditions. Under
controlled conditions a
supersaturated solution can be
prepared by warming the
solvent and cooling slowly.

14.4
Expressing Concentrations
A
qualitative way of expressing concentration is termed
dilute and concentrated. A relatively
small quantity of solute
per unit of solution is dilute.
Concentrated is a relatively
large amount of solute per unit of
solution.
Quantitative expressions are used in
chemistry to attain
specific information.

For dilute concentration, concentrations are expressed in
parts per million(ppm).

Exp:
12.5g of glucose
(C6H12O6) are dissolved in 0.100kg
of H2O. Calculate the percentage
concentration of the
solute.

Exp:
4.6µg of zinc2+
was found in a sample of 2.3g sample
of ground water. What is the concentration of Zn2+
in
ppm?


Exp:
How many grams of
silver nitrate(AgNO3) must be
dissolved to prepare 4.00x 102ml 0.140M
AgNO3?

Exp:
What is the
molarity of a solution made by dissolving
3.00g potassium chlorate(KClO3) in water to make
160mL
solution?
First:
Think about what we are given
3.00g/160ml
we don't want mL so we must convert to
liters

Second: we
need to apply a unit of grams/mole

Third: we
need to use the moles we calculated to one liter
to get molarity of the solution.

The answer is 0.153M

14.5
Colligative Properties
"Solution
properties that are determined by the number
of solute particles dissolved in a
fixed quantity of solvent
are called colligative properties".
It is possible to change some physical
properties of solvents
by introducing and altering the
quantity of solutes in a
solution. An example of this is adding
antifreeze to water
in a radiator to lower the freezing
point. The lowering of
the freezing point, raising of boiling
point, and reduction of
vapor pressures are all colligative
properties. Both the change
in freezing point and the boiling point
can be related to the
reduction of vapor pressure. When the
vapor pressure
decreases the boiling point increases
because a liquid boils
when its vapor pressure equals
atmospheric pressure. When
a nonvolatile solute is introduced to a
pure solvent the solution
volatility decreases from its original
amount by a certain
percentage. In other words the solvent
no longer reaches
atmospheric pressure as fast as it did
before the nonvolatile
solute was introduced. Freezing of
water occurs when water
and ice have the Same vapor
pressure(O°C). However, in a
solution (water and nonvolatile solute)
an equilibrium of
solution-ice vapor pressure occurs at a
point below O°C.
Colligative
properties can be used to determine molar
mass. The number of moles of solute per
kilogram of solvent
are proportional to boiling point
elevation and freezing point
depression. The concentration
expression is molality(m)
which is the number of moles of solute
per kilogram of solvent.


The change in freezing point depression and the boiling point
elevation have equations and constants associated with them.


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