1 / 54

CVEN 4424 Environmental Organic Chemistry

CVEN 4424 Environmental Organic Chemistry . Lecture 6 – Aqueous Solubility. Announcements. Reading Chapter 5, Aqueous solubility Problem sets PS 2 due today PS 3 out today, due next Thursday Office hours Tuesday, 12:30-2, my office Wednesday, 11-12 am, ECES 131

anaya
Télécharger la présentation

CVEN 4424 Environmental Organic Chemistry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CVEN 4424Environmental Organic Chemistry Lecture 6 – Aqueous Solubility

  2. Announcements • Reading • Chapter 5, Aqueous solubility • Problem sets • PS 2 due today • PS 3 out today, due next Thursday • Office hours • Tuesday, 12:30-2, my office • Wednesday, 11-12 am, ECES 131 • Wednesday, 3-5 pm, ECES 131 (TA Brett)

  3. Aqueous Solubility  • Another phase change • vapor pressure: • pure solid  gas (ideal) • pure liquid  gas (ideal) • aqueous solubility • pure solid  “liquid” in water (mixed, non-ideal) • pure liquid  liquid in water (mixed, non-ideal) • pure gas  “liquid” in water (mixed, non-ideal) • solubility (Cwsat) at specified T and p

  4. Aqueous Solubility

  5. Aqueous Solubility w L Solubility of an organic liquid

  6. Aqueous Solubility w L • Solubility of an organic liquid • assumptions about organic phase • xL 1 (essentially no water in organic phase) • L = 1 (pure liquid; ideal interactions)

  7. Aqueous Solubility w L • Solubility of an organic liquid • assumptions about organic phase • xL 1 (essentially no water in organic phase) • L = 1 (pure liquid; ideal interactions)

  8. Aqueous Solubility ideal mixing non-ideal interactions • Solubility of an organic liquid • already liquid; does not have to melt • ideal mixing, RTlnxw • wSideal increases; change in molar volume • non-ideal interactions, RTlnw • enthalpy cost, wHE, and entropy cost, wSE • proportional to solute size  cavity in water

  9. solid fusH fusS Aqueous Solubility water liquid wHE wSE wSideal

  10. Aqueous Solubility fusG: melting costs - need more heat, fusH - further increase in entropy, fusS • Solubility of an organic solid • pure solid  pure liquid (melting) • pure liquid  water (dissolution)

  11. Aqueous Solubility What is the solubility of a Twinkie?(an organic solid?)

  12. gas -vapH -vapS Aqueous Solubility solid fusH fusS water liquid wHE wSE wSideal

  13. Aqueous Solubility condG: condensation “income” - removing heat, condH - decreasing entropy, condS • Solubility of an organic gas • pure gas  pure liquid (condensation) • pure liquid  water (dissolution) • p = 1 bar

  14. Aqueous Solubility Excess enthalpy of solubility wH2 (+) wH1(+) wH3(-) wH4(-) wHcav wHice

  15. fusH(+) Aqueous Solubility Excess enthalpy of solubility wH2 (+) wH1(+) wH3(-) wH4(-) wHcav wHice

  16. fusH(+) -vapH(-) Aqueous Solubility Excess enthalpy of solubility wH2 (+) wH1(+) wH3(-) wH4(-) wHcav wHice

  17. Aqueous Solubility * at saturation or dilute condition

  18. Aqueous Solubility fusS(+) Excess entropy of solubility wScav(-) wSideal(+) wSice(-) -vapS(-)

  19. Aqueous Solubility * at saturation or dilute condition

  20. gas -vapH -vapS Aqueous Solubility solid fusH fusS water liquid wHE wSE wSideal

  21. Aqueous Solubility • Rank the following compounds by aqueous solubility from highest to lowest.benzene ethylbenzenetoluene p-xyleneA. ethylbenzene > p-xylene > toluene > benzeneB. benzene > toluene > ethylbenzene > p-xyleneC. benzene > toluene > p-xylene  ethylbenzene

  22. Aqueous Solubility • Rank the following compounds by aqueous solubility from highest to lowest.benzene ethylbenzenetoluene p-xyleneA. ethylbenzene > p-xylene > toluene > benzeneB. benzene > toluene > ethylbenzene > p-xyleneC. benzene > toluene > p-xylene  ethylbenzene Cwsat 0.022 M 0.0060 M 0.0016 M 0.0017 M

  23. Aqueous Solubility * at saturation or dilute condition

  24. Aqueous Solubility • At equilibrium (wG = 0)

  25. Aqueous Solubility • At equilibrium (wG = 0)

  26. Aqueous Solubility • At equilibrium (wG = 0)

  27. Aqueous Solubility • Activity coefficient • for low solubility compounds: • for high solubility compounds • solubility defined two ways: • “low solubility” as w > 100 • “high solubility” as volume fraction >0.01

  28. Aqueous Solubility high activity coefficient low solubility  wsat Cwsat low activity coefficient high solubility 

  29. water Aqueous Solubility gas liquid • Relate w to other properties • from pure liquid to vapor • described by pL* • from vapor to water • size of cavity • molar volume of solute • solute-water interactions • van der Waals • hydrogen bonding

  30. Aqueous Solubility vdW forces size H-bond descriptor for H-acceptor (Table 4.3) vapor pressure of solute as a liquid (bar) molar volume of solute as a liquid H-bond descriptor for H-donor (Table 4.3) dipolarity/ polarizability descriptor (Table 5.5) refractive index of solute Relate w to other properties (Eqn. 5-22)

  31. Aqueous Solubility • Temperature dependence • liquid • small DwHE • small temperature effect • solid • small DwHE, large DfusH • large temperature effect • gas • small DwHE, large DcondH • large temperature effect

  32. Aqueous Solubility • Gas • Cwsatincreaseswith decreasing temperature • Liquid • not much  • Solid • Cwsat decreaseswith decreasing temperature

  33. Aqueous Solubility • Liquid • slope iswHE/R over T range of interest • slope very small • slope not constant • wHE is very small, sometimes +, sometimes –(see Table 5.3)

  34. Aqueous Solubility • Solid • slope is wH/R = (fusH +wHE)/R • Usually,fusH > wHE

  35. Aqueous Solubility • Gas • slope is wH/R = (-vapH + wHE)/R • Usually, -vapH > wHE

  36. Aqueous Solubility Na+ • Salt in water • “electrostriction” • water forms hydration shells around ions • less water available for compound to dissolve into • “Salting out” • decreases solubility of nonpolar organic compounds

  37. Aqueous Solubility • Setschenow equation • Setschenow constant KS • compound-specific (increases with decreasing Cwsat) • salt-specific (increases with increasing ion hydration) • total molar salt concentration [salt]t • single salt or mixture of salts (e.g., seawater) (Eqn. 5-27)

  38. Aqueous Solubility • Example: pyrene “salting out” of seawater • Cwsat (25C) = 10-6.16 M • KS = 0.30 (Table 5.7 for seawater) • [salt]T  0.5 M • {[cations (M)] + [anions (M)]}/2

  39. Aqueous Solubility • Example: pyrene • seawater reduces solubility by about 29%

  40. Aqueous Solubility pyrene in pure water pyrene in 20% methanol solution • Co-solvents in water • high solubility organic compounds • replace water in cavity around nonpolar organic compound • Increase solubility • more favorable interactions with nonpolar organic compound

  41. Aqueous Solubility (Eqn. 5-33) • Estimate solubility in co-solvent mixture • il activity coefficient in co-solvent/water mix • iw activity coefficient in pure water • ic “co-solvency power” (depends on fv) • fractional volume of co-solvent in water fv

  42. Aqueous Solubility • Example (see Illustrative Example 5.5) • What is the solubility of naphthalene in a 20% acetone/water solution at 298 K? • activity coefficient of naphthalene (solid)

  43. Aqueous Solubility • Example • activity coefficient of naphthalene (solid) • Cwsat = 10-3.60 M • Vw = 0.018 L mol-1 • vapor pressure ratio

  44. Aqueous Solubility • Example • activity coefficient of naphthalene (solid) • vapor pressure ratio •  = 0 (no SP3, no SP2, 1 RING) •  = 4 (2 planes of rotational symmetry) • Tm = 80.2 C = 353.4 K

  45. Aqueous Solubility • Example • activity coefficient of naphthalene (solid) • ic = 6.5 (Table 5.8) • fv = 0.2

  46. Aqueous Solubility • Example • solubility: naphthalene in 20% acetone/water

  47. Aqueous Solubility • Organic liquid mixtures • petroleum – gasoline, oil, kerosene • coal tar • PCBs – Arochlor

  48. Aqueous Solubility • Organic liquid mixtures • org mix  1 to 5 • xorg mix • need average mw of organic liquid mixture • e.g., coal tar150 g mol-1 • no melting costs • compound is already in liquid phase in organic mixture

  49. Aqueous Solubility Organic liquid mixtures example: What concentration of benzene should we find in water in equilibrium with gasoline containing benzene at a concentration of 1 vol%?

  50. Aqueous Solubility Benzene in water in equilibrium with gasoline containing 1 vol% benzene? Need estimates for and

More Related