AP/gen chem properties of substances and mixtures

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Last updated 7:19 AM on 4/27/26
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28 Terms

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Properties of ionic solids

Soluble in polar solvents

Conduct electricity only when molten or dissolved in a polar solvent

High melting points

Very hard

Low volatility

Brittle

Ions line up in a repetitive pattern that maximize attractive forces

Not mailable or ductle

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Properties of molecular solids

Molecular solids do not conduct electricity

Individuals molecules have no net charge

Molecular solids are held together by IMFs

High VP

Low melting and boiling points

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Boiling point

A liquid could when it’s VP is equal to atmospheric pressure

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sublimation

Solids can evaporate and they have very low VP because their IMFs are so strong

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Covalent network solid

Always composed of one or two nonmetals

Carbon group elements often form covalent covalent network solids as they can from four covalent bonds

The highest melting points and normally very hard, as atoms are covalent bonded with fixed angles

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Properties of synthetic polymers

Plastics are generally flexible solids or viscous liquids

Heating plastic increases flexibility and allows them to be molded

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Metallic solids

Bonding is not covalent

Bonding results from the attractions between nuclei and delocalized valence electrons moving throughout the structure

Bond strength increases as the number of bonding electrons increases

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Saturated solution

  • When the solvent has dissolved the maximum amount of solute possible at a certain temperature, and some solid particles remain undissolved.

  • This is an equilibrium system where solid particles continually dissolve in the solvent and dissolved particles fall out of solution.

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Liquid-liquid solutions

Only mix if they both have the same polarity

Miscible solutions never become saturated.

Differences in intermolecular forces can cause the solution's volume to differ from the sum of the volumes before mixing.

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Solids-liquid

  • Many ionic compounds dissolve in polar solvents. (ion-dipole).

  • Polar solids, dissolve in polar solvents.

  • Non-polar solids, dissolve in non-polar solvents.

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Gas-gas

Gases are infinity soluble with each other

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Gas-solid

Gases can occupy the spaces between some metal

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Light formula

c=λυ\lambda\upsilon

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Planks equations

E=hυ\upsilon

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The photoelectric effect

intense low frequency light dont eject any electrons, even if it shines for some time

When the threshold frequency is reached, electrons are ejected immediately.

Increasing the intensity of the light will increase the rate of ejection However, all ejected electrons share the same velocity.

Increasing the frequency of the light increases the velocity of the electrons.

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Ion-dipole solubility

  • Some ionic compounds do not dissolve in water

  • If cation-anion attractions are stronger than ion-dipole attraction, the compound will not be soluble.
    Ionic compounds do not dissolve in non-polar solvents, as non-polar solvents do not carry permanent dipoles.

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Fractional distillation

The separation of volatile liquids in a liquid-liquid solution on the basis of boiling points.

The condensed solution has a higher concentration of the component with the higher vapor pressures

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Gas solubility and temperature

The solubility of most gases decreases as temperature increases.

  • As the kinetic energy of particles within a solution increases, aqueous particles break free from these weak attractions and re-enter the gas phase.

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Henry’s law

The solubility of a gas is directly proportional to the partial pressure of that gas above the solution.

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UV/vis spectroscopy

Shining these types of lights cause electrons to be excited to go to a different orbital, releasing light. This allows us to identify the element.

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Absorption spectrum

The peaks of this light absorption spectrum represent the wavelengths of light that correspond to the energy of an electron transitions from ground to excited state orbitals.

The tallest peaks represents the wavelength most absorbed by the electrons

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Beer-lambert law (beers law) equation

Used to find concentration graph

A = ξ\xi bi

A = Absorbance how much light was absorbed by the solute

ξ\xi = absorbtivity, slope (m)

b= length of solution (X)

C= length of solution pathway

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Infrared spectroscopy

Examines the Vibrations of the bonds. All covalent bonds in molecules are vibrating

detects the presence of different types of bonds so as to identify molecules.

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Vibrations and infrared

covalent bonds have a vibrational frequency that corresponds to the frequency of light in the infrared light spectrum.

When this exact IR frequency is absorbed by the molecule, the atoms vibrate more rapidly

Vibrate in all directions

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Infrared use

IR spectroscopy is used to identify:

bong types

Each atom has a specific viberation that can be used to identify it

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Microwave spectroscopy

This absorbed light changes the rotations bonded atoms. This Tells us the Locations molecule.

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Solids states of motions

Solids can only vibrate

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Liquids and gases in motions

They can rotate vibrate, and transition (move from one place to another)