solution chemistry and solubility 12a—demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the...

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Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare unsaturated, saturated, and supersaturated solutions 13B—Interpret relationships among ionic and covalent compounds,

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Page 1: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solution Chemistry and Solubility

12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the

solubility of solids

13A—Compare unsaturated, saturated, and supersaturated solutions

13B—Interpret relationships among ionic and covalent compounds, electrical conductivity, and

colligative properties of water

Page 2: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Review

Element—substance that cannot be broken down into simpler substances (periodic table)

Compound—a substance made of atoms of more than one element bound together (H2O, CO2, NaCl)

Mixture—a combination of more than one pure substance (Salt water, Powerade, Salad)

Page 3: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Mixture Review

Mixture—a physical blend of two or more substances

Heterogeneous mixture—one that is not uniform in composition

Homogeneous mixture—one that has a completely uniform composition

Page 4: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Mixture Review

Page 5: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Mixture REVIEW You can separate mixtures by PHYSICAL

means Distillation Separation Chromatography

Page 6: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Type Particle size

Settle upon standing

Tyndall effect (Scatter light)

Solutions Homo-geneous

0.01-1 nm No no

Colloid Hetero-geneous

1-1000 nm No Yes

Suspension Hetero-geneous

Greater than 1000 nm

Yes sometimes

Page 7: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solution Chemistry Solution—a homogeneous mixture Solute—dissolved particles in a solution Solvent—the dissolving medium in a

solution (usually water, the universal solvent)

Page 8: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Kool-Aid Solution

Kool-Aid Juice is the SOLUTION Kool-Aid powder and Sugar are the

SOLUTES Water is the SOLVENT

Page 9: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Soluble vs. Insoluble

Soluble—dissolves completely so that solution looks transparent (free of any floating particles

Insoluble—does not dissolve completely; solution is cloudy

Page 10: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

How does dissolving takes place?

What happens when salt is dissolved in water?

NaCl Na+ + Cl-

Page 11: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Complete the dissociation of the following salts:

KCl K+ + Cl-

MgCl2 Mg+2 + 2Cl-

AlCl3 Al+3 + 3Cl-

MgF2Mg+2 + 2F-

Page 12: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solution Chemistry Electrolytes—compounds that conduct an

electric current ALL ionic compounds; NaCl, CuSO4, NaOH

Nonelectrolytes—Compounds that do not conduct an electric current in either aqueous solution or the molten state Many molecular compounds; carbon, sugar,

alcohol

Page 13: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Electrolytes vs. Nonelectrolytes

Page 14: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Electrolytes vs. Nonelectrolytes Some very polar molecular compounds are

nonelectrolytes in pure state but become electrolytes when dissolved in water

NH3(g) + H2O(l) NH4+(aq) + OH-(aq)

Page 15: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Electrolytes vs. Nonelectrolytes

Weak Electrolyte—only a fraction of the solute exists as ions

Strong Electrolyte—almost all the solute exists as separate ions

Page 16: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Weak Electrolyte in Weak Electrolyte in solution.solution.

Strong electrolyte Strong electrolyte in solution.in solution.

Page 17: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Electrolytes vs. Nonelectrolytes

STRONG ELECTROLYTES Strong acids (HCl, H2SO4, HNO3) Strong bases (NaOH, KOH)

WEAK ELECTROLYTES Weak acids (Vinegar, acetic acid, CH3COOH)

Weak bases (Ammonia, NH3)

NONELECTROLYTES Molecular compounds Nonmetal bonded to nonmetal

Page 18: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Electrolytes vs. Nonelectrolytes

More ions in solutions, the more conductivity Which salt would give more ions: NaCl or

MgCl2?

So, which will conduct electricity more/be a better electrolyte?

Look back at the dissociation reactions and determine the better electrolyte.

Page 19: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solutions are homogeneous mixtures that could be solid, liquid, or gaseous

Gas Gas Oxygen in nitrogen

Gas Liquid CO2 in water

Liquid Gas Water in air

Liquid Liquid Alcohol in water

Liquid Solid Mercury in silver and tin (dental amalgam)

Solid Liquid Sugar in water

Solid Solid Copper in nickel (alloys)

Page 20: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solubility Solubility—the amount that dissolves in a

given quantity of a solvent at a given temperature to produce a saturated solution. Solubility is often expressed in grams of solute

per 100g of solvent

Page 21: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Water and Solubility?

REMEMBER water is a POLAR molecule Polar means electrons are not spread evenly

throughout the molecule

Polar molecules dissolve polar molecules Water can dissolve ammonia

Nonpolar molecules dissolve nonpolar molecules Octane (gasoline) can dissolve CO2

LIKE DISSOLVES LIKE!!!!LIKE DISSOLVES LIKE!!!!

Page 22: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solution Concentration

Concentration—the quantity of solute dissolved in a given quantity of solution Three ways to describe a solution

Unsaturated solutionSaturated solutionSupersaturated solution

Page 23: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solubility

Unsaturated—a solution that contains less solute than solvent

Saturated—a solution that contains the maximum amount of solute for a given amount of solvent at a constant temperature

Supersaturated—a solution that contains more solute than it can theoretically hold at a given temperature; crystals form

Page 24: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare
Page 25: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solubility

Two liquids are said to be MISCIBLE if they dissolve in each other Water and ethanol dissolve in each other

Liquids that are insoluble in each other are IMMISCIBLE. Oil and water do no dissolve in each other

Page 26: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

MISCIBLE

Water and alcohol

IMMISCIBLE

Water and oil

Page 27: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Gas Solubility

Henry’s Law—as the pressure of the gas above the liquid increases, solubility of the gas increases and vice versa

Page 28: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Gas Solubility

Henry’s Law

S = solubility P = Pressure

S1 S2

P1 P2

=

Page 29: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Gas Solubility

EXAMPLES Ears Popping Underwater Diving (the bends) Airplane taking off or landing

Page 30: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Factors Affecting Solubility

SURFACE AREA Solutes with larger surface area dissolves faster

Smaller pieces dissolve faster than larger pieces

Page 31: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Factors Affecting Solubility

STIRRING Stirring or shaking a solution helps the solute

dissolve fasterStirring or shaking moves dissolved sugar away from

undissolved sugar crystals

Page 32: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Factors Affecting Solubility

TEMPERATURE Solutes dissolve faster when the solvent is hot

When substance is heated, particles move faster causing more collisions between particles

Page 33: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Factors Affecting Solubility

Things that dissolve in water are called SOLUBLE

Things that do not dissolve in water are called INSOLUBLE

Page 34: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solubility Curves

Solubility curves (graphs) give the solubility and temperature of a saturated solution.

Solubility is on y-axis Temperature (°C) is on x-axis

Page 35: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solubility Curve

Page 36: Solution Chemistry and Solubility 12A—Demonstrate and explain effects of temperature and the nature of solid solutes on the solubility of solids 13A—Compare

Solubility Curves

SATURATED solution is ON line or curve UNSATURATED solution is BELOW line

or curve SUPERSATURATED solution is above line

or curve