1 / 27

Chapter 8

Chapter 8. Solutions, Acids & Bases. Formation of a Solution. Formations of a Solution involves: - one substance dissolving into another - can be a solid, liquid or gas ex. gas - gas: air liquid - gas: water in air gas - liquid: carbonated beverages

jolene
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 8

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. Chapter 8 Solutions, Acids & Bases

  2. Formation of a Solution • Formations of a Solution involves: - one substance dissolving into another - can be a solid, liquid or gas ex. gas - gas: air liquid - gas: water in air gas - liquid: carbonated beverages liquid - liquid: vinegar solid - liquid: sugar water solid - solid: stainless steel

  3. Parts of Solution • Two parts - solute: dissolved - solvent: does the dissolving OR what the solute is dissolved in * Can’t tell which is which? - the one that changes phase is the solute ex. salt in water - when both are in the same phase, the substance with the smaller amount ex. cream in coffee

  4. Parts of a Solution Cont. • Solvent = alcohol : tincture • Solvent = 2 + metals: alloy • Solvent = mercury: amalgam • Solvent = water: aqueous solution (universal solvent)

  5. Dissolving in Water • 3 ways - Dissociation of Ionic Compounds - solute and solvent must attract to one another, overcoming solute particle attraction and solvent particle attraction NaCl - Dispersion: at the ionic or molecular level - Molecular - C2H5OH will dissolve in water the – OH part of the water is polar and attracted to the polar part of water (physical change) - Ionization- HCl will dissolve in water. Break into ions: H+, Cl- and will be attracted to the positive and negative parts of water (chemical change)

  6. Types of Solutions • Homogenous mixture: - 2+ substances that are uniform throughout • Suspension • mixture that appears uniform while being stirred, separates into different phases when agitation stops ex. clay and water, aerosol cans, blood • Colloid - a mixture containing particles of varying sizes ex. fog, milk * Tyndall effect: scattering of light rays by particles

  7. Solubility • Max amount of solute that dissolves in a given amount of solvent at a constant temperature - generally expressed in g of solute per 100 g of solvent ex. • Soluble- dissolves • Insoluble- does not dissolve • Miscible- 2 liquids that will dissolve • Immiscible- 2 liquids that will not dissolve

  8. Describing Solutions • Saturated - contain as much solute as the solvent can hold at a given temperature - is you add more solute it will not dissolve • Unsaturated - solution that has less than the maximum amount of solute that can be dissolved - beverages: lemonade, Kool-aid • Supersaturated - solutions can more solute that it can normally hold at a given temperature (unstable)

  9. How Solutions Dissolve • Remember…..”like dissolves like” - Polar dissolves polar - Nonpolar disolves nonpolar * This is why oil and water don’t mix. Water is a polar substance and fats and oils are non-polar

  10. Factors Affecting the Rate of Solution • Rate of solution- a measure of how fat a substance dissolves • Four Factors - for solids, particle size (Increased surface area) - Stirring- increases rate - Amount of solute already dissolved - more solute dissolved, the rate decreases - Temperature- solubility curves

  11. Factors Affecting Solubility • 3 factors that affect solubility - nature of the solvent: (Polar vs. Nonpolar) - difference in the properties of the solvent and the solute - molecular structure and polarity - temperature: Solid in liquid (you’ll see this in solubility curves) - as temperature ,solubility ex. warm soda going “flat” - pressure: NO effect on solids or liquids Gases: as pressure , solubility

  12. Nature of the Solvent • Difference in the properties of the solvent and the solute - molecular structure and polarity

  13. Concentration of Solutions • Concentration of Solution - amount of solute dissolved in a specified amount of solution ex. amount of lemons in squeezed for lemonade - Dilute- less amount of solute, per amount of solvent ex: small amount of time the tea bag is left in - Concentrated - more amount of solute is dissolved ex. large amount of time the tea bag is left in • Expressed as: - percent by volume - percent by mass - Molarity

  14. Percent By Volume • Percent by volume = volume of solute x 100 volume of solvent - a way to measure the concentration of one liquid dissolved in another ex. how much “real juice” in your drink

  15. Percent By Mass • Percent by mass = mass of solute x 100 mass of solvent - more useful if solute is a solid ex. 100g of solution in sugar water, allow water to evaporate and 20 g of sugar is left the concentration of sugar in the solution is 20 % by mass

  16. Molarity • Molarity: the number of moles of a solute dissolved per Liters of solution. • Molarity = Moles of solute Liters of solution *remember a mole is the amount of a substance that contains approximately 6.022 x 1023 particles • Steps • 1st calculate molar mass of the solute • Dissolve with enough water to make a 1 L solution • Result is a 1-molar solution

  17. Molarity Problems • What is the molarity of a solution consisting of 111 g of CaCl2 dissolved in enough water to make 2.0 L of solution? • What volume of a 2.00-M solution KI in water contains 5.96 moles of solute?

  18. Molarity Answers 111 g CaCl2 x _1 mol_ = 1.00 110.98 1.00 = .50 M 2.0 2.00 M = 5.96 moles x L 5.96 moles = 2.98 L 2.00 M

  19. Properties of Acids • Identifying Acids - acid is a compound that produces hydronium ions (H3O+ ) when dissolved in water. - general properties include: - sour taste: lemons, lines, grapefruit - reactivity with metal: ex: left overs in foils - ability to produce color changes in indicators ex. blue litmus paper turns red

  20. Properties of Bases • Identifying Bases - base is a compound that produces hydroxide ions (OH-) when dissolved in water - general properties include: - bitter taste: baking chocolate, cough syrups - slippery feel: wet soap, cleaning products - color changes in indicators ex. red litmus paper will turn blue

  21. Neutralization and Salts • Neutralization: reaction between an acid and base - negative ions in an acid combine with the positive ions in a base to produce an ionic compound (salt) - hydronium ions from the acid combine with the hydroxide ions from the base to produce water - Overall production of salt and water ex. HCl + NaOH  HOH + NaCl A B Water Salt

  22. Proton Donors & Acceptors • Protons Donors - Acids: ex: H2SO4, , HCl • Protons Acceptors - Bases: ex. NaOH • Classifying Acids and Bases on acceptors/donors - by definition water is neither an acid or base - by acceptor/donor definition, water can act as either depending on what it reacts with ex.

  23. Objectives • Define pH, and relate pH to hydronium ion concentration in a solution • Distinguish between strong acids and weak acids, and between strong bases and weak bases. • Define buffer, and describe how a buffer can be prepared. • Explain how electrolytes can be classified

  24. Strength of Acids & Bases • pH Scale - measure of its hydronium ion concentration - pH of 7 is neutral - acids < 7, lower the number the more hydronium ions - Bases >7 - water is neutral at 7 ex. lemons, limes, oranges < 7 acidic milk, soaps, ammonia

  25. Strength of Acids • Strong Acids - ionize almost completely in water ex. HI, HCl, HNO3, H2SO4, HClO4 • Weak Acids - ionize only slightly in water - equilibrium favors reactants over products - weak acids can have a higher pH than a strong acid of same concentration * remember concentration and strength are different, do not assume a strong acid has a low pH. ex. HCl (strong acid) can have a pH of 6 concentrated acetic acid (weak acid) can have a pH of 3

  26. Strength of Bases • Strong Bases - ionize almost completely in water ex. NH3 • Weak Bases - ionize only slightly in water - reactants are favored in equilibrium - often used as buffers, solution that is resistant to large changes in pH - made by mixing a weak acid and its salt or a weak base and its salt ex. HF + NaF

  27. Strength of Electrolytes • Electrolyte - substance that ionizes or dissociates into ions when it dissolves in water - can conduct electricity well • Strong - strong acids due to dissociation ex. H2SO4 • Weak - strong bases due to dissociation ex. KOH, NaOH

More Related