Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a...

20
Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?)

Transcript of Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a...

Page 1: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

Lecture Solubility

(What is the key to life?)

Page 2: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

Have you ever made lemonade?

Have you ever drank a soda pop?

Have you ever drank milk?

What do all these items have in common?

Page 3: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

1. Mixture: two or more substances physically combined, not chemically combineda. homogeneous: mixture is evenly spread out: sugar cookie, lemonadeb. heterogeneous: mixture unevenly spread out: chocolate chip cookie, unmixed lemonade

2. Solution: a homogeneous mixture in which the particle attraction (electrons) keep it stable ?a. all three phases can occur as a solution: alloy is solution of metals: 14K gold (w/silver);perfume toob. cannot be filtered because the particles are too small, thus…can be suspended due to solution’s atomic-kinetic energy (Brownian motion)c. made of two parts: solute and the solvent

Page 4: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

3. Solvent: dissolves particles, usually the larger quantity by volume; lemonade = ?

4. Solute: dissolves into the solvent, usually the smaller in volume; lemonade = ?

5. Universal solvent: H2Oa. water will dissolve so many things, especially particles which have a charge (ionic)b. polar molecule: uneven distribution of charges on the molecule; water:negative near the oxygen and positive near the two hydrogen: acts like two mini-magnetscauses water to dissolve other polar molecules: acts as attachment points to grab and dissolve: + w/ -non-polar: no attachment points for water: lipids;but non-polar will dissolve non-polar: dry cleaningc. do you like Disneyland, how about Mickey Mouse?

Page 5: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

H + H + O = H2O

Polar molecule:

H H

O

_

+ +

Page 6: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

d. water is shaped like a pyramid: tetrahedron

e. polarity of water explains many attributes, especially that water molecules bond together via hydrogen bond (weak bond):

-high surface tension: bugs can walk on water

-high specific heat (due to groupings of water molecules) holds water strongly together: absorbs a lot of energy needed to break the H bonds

-six sided structure when frozen: snow flakes

-volume increases when frozen: less dense than liquid water

-water moving up plants to the leaves: capillary action

Page 7: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

6. Rate of dissolving due to three factors:a. temperature: high temp = faster molecules move: increased kinetic energy: faster rate of dissolvingcold vs hot lemonade?b. particle size: dissolving occurs only on the surface of the solute: smaller object = the more surface area to volume: small solutes dissolve fastertype of sugar for lemonade?c. solution movement: increases the energy of the system: increases the rate of dissolvingto stir or not to stir the lemonade, that is the question

Page 8: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

7. Solubility: the ability to dissolve and form a solution: a characteristic propertya. can range from insoluble (sand in water) to infinitely soluble (ethanol in water)b. the maximum mass in a given volume (measured in grams) usually expressed as # of grams of solute per 100g of solvent at a specific temperature:

sugar: 200g/100g water…. a lot!!salt: 36 g/100g water…. very poorly

thus solubility is a characteristic property:this is due to the strength of the bond between

the atoms in the compound:strong bonds = low solubilityweak bonds = high solubility

Page 9: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

Variable solubility of different substances:CHARACTERISTIC PROPERTY

DRAW THIS GRAPH

Page 10: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

c. solubility is affected by both temperature and pressure:

-gases:1. increase temp: decrease the solubility (inverse relationship): pour a soda cold or warm?, stream water for dissolved oxygen for fish?2. increase pressure: increase solubility: soda goes flat when?-solid:1. solubility increases with temperature (direct relationship): how

would you make lemonade which is very sugary?

Page 11: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

Variable solubility due to temperature change:

Page 12: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

solubility of a gas:

Page 13: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

8. Concentration: maximum amount of solute in a volume of solvent: g/cm3 (note: it is the same unit as density but it is two different substances, unlike density). Is usually given in g/100 cm3:Suppose you have a solution w/ a concentration of 0.015g per 1cm3. How many grams of solute would you have at the same concentration and the same temperature if you had 100 cm3 of solvent?:

0.015g = Xg 1cm3 100cm3

0.015g x 100 cm3 = Xg x 1 cm3

= 1.5g (per 100cm3)

Page 14: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

a. saturated: maximum solute at a given temp and pressure: visible when a precipitate (undisolvable solute) is present at the bottom of the container (too much sugar in the lemonade).Also known as concentrated (maximum) or in equilibrium: dissolving and undissolving rates of solute are at a constantb. unsaturated: less solute than saturated; could dissolve more solute; also known as dilute

Page 15: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

Label:-saturated-unsaturated

Page 16: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

c. supersaturated: more solute dissolved than at saturation: rock candy. Made by increasing the solvent temperature, thus increasing the solubility, then cool the solution down and the solution is now supersaturated: very unstable and will precipitate to saturated if disturbed

9. suspension: mixture with particles so large that over time they will settle out: not enough kinetic energy in the system to keep them suspended: forms a precipitate

10. Colloid: small particles suspended by the kinetic energy of the electrons: reflect light when shined through the solution (Tyndall effect: milk).

Page 17: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

Label:-supersaturated

Page 18: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

Worksheet 19.2: making solutions:

Example: a scientist needs to prepare one liter of a solution of potassium chloride (KCl) for an experiment. The concentration of the required solution is 3.2 Moles. How will the scientist prepare this solution from the solid KCl she has in a jar on her lab shelf? Show your work!!:

know: 3.2 Moles, KCl

? know: 1L

Formula: molarity = # moles solute

liter of solution

1M = g solute

1 L solvent

Page 19: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.

1K x 39 amu 39g

1Cl x 36 amu 36g

formula mass of solute = 75 amu

molar mass of solute = 75 g

1M = g solute

1 L solvent

1M = 75g

1L

So, total mass solute = 75g for 1 liter of solvent which is 1 molar; but we want what molarity?

75g x 3.2 M = 240g (in 1 liter)

1M

Page 20: Lecture Solubility (What is the key to life?). Have you ever made lemonade? Have you ever drank a soda pop? Have you ever drank milk? What do all these.