Definition of Solutions: A solution is formed when a solute dissolves in a solvent, producing a homogeneous mixture.
Properties of Solutions:
Particles are smaller than 1 nm in size.
Cannot be separated by simple filtration.
The solute 'gets dissolved' (e.g., sugar in water).
The solvent 'does the dissolving' (e.g., water dissolves sugar).
Solvation: Interaction between solvent and dissolved solute leading to dissolution.
Specific term for water as the solvent is called hydration.
Dissolution relies on mutual attraction between solute and solvent particles.
Example: Diagram shows solvation of salt (NaCl) in water (H₂O).
Dissolving:
Separating a substance into individual particles.
Dissociation:
Ionic substances separate into their component ions.
Ionization:
Forms ions from a substance that initially does not exist as ions in solution.
Electrolytes: Solutions that can conduct electricity due to presence of ions.
Polarity: Distribution of electrons in a molecule.
Polar molecules: Unequal electron distribution.
Nonpolar molecules: Equal electron distribution.
Dissolution Principle: "Like dissolves like"
Polar substances dissolve in polar solvents; nonpolar substances dissolve in nonpolar solvents.
Miscibility: A substance's ability to dissolve in another.
Miscible: Can dissolve
Immiscible: Cannot dissolve.
Types of Solutions:
Unsaturated: Can dissolve more solute.
Saturated: Cannot dissolve more solute.
Supersaturated: Contains more solute than maximum solubility, unstable (may crystallize).
Concentration: Amount of solute in solution.
Definition: Number of moles of solute per liter of solution.
Higher molarity indicates a higher solute concentration.
Molarity Calculation:
M = moles of solute / liters of solution
M = total grams of solute / (molar mass 00 mL of solution)*
Example 1: Molarity of a 2.5 L solution with 1.25 moles of KCl:
M = 1.25 mol / 2.5 L = 0.50 M KCl
Example 2: Calculating molarity from moles and volume. Beaker A (0.06 moles in 0.06 L): 1 M; Beaker B (0.18 moles in 0.06 L): 3 M
More Concentrated: Beaker B.
Utilizing molarity as a conversion factor in stoichiometry calculations.
Conversion formula: Molarity = moles of solute / L of solution
Stoichiometric relationships can be derived based on mole ratios from balanced equations.
Definitions:
Acids: Produce hydrogen ions (H⁺) when dissolved.
Bases: Produce hydroxide ions (OH⁻) in solution.
Neutral: Equal concentrations of H⁺ and OH⁻.
pH Scale: Measure of acidity/basicity:
pH < 7: Acidic
pH = 7: Neutral
pH > 7: Basic
Acid: Produces H₃O⁺ when donating H⁺ to water.
Base: Accepts H⁺ ions.
Diagram illustrates ionization of HCl and NaOH in water.
General Reaction:
Acid + Base → Salt + Water
Example reactions show various neutralization processes.
Water can auto-ionize:
H₂O ↔ H₃O⁺ + OH⁻
Ionization Constant (Kw): K w = [H₃O⁺][OH⁻]
At 25°C, Kw = 1.00 × 10⁻¹⁴
Dilution: Adding solvent to a solution reduces molarity but keeps moles of solute constant.
Dilution Formula: M₁V₁ = M₂V₂
Technique to determine the concentration of an unknown acid/base.
Equivalence Point: Moles of acid = moles of base.
Important formula for calculations: (M₁V₁ = M₂V₂)
Strong Acids: Completely dissociate (e.g. HCl).
Weak Acids: Partially dissociate (e.g. HCOOH).
Eight Strong Acids:
HCl - Hydrochloric Acid
HBr - Hydrobromic Acid
HI - Hydroiodic Acid
HNO₃ - Nitric Acid
H₂SO₄ - Sulfuric Acid
HCIO₄ - Perchloric Acid
LI OH - Lithium Hydroxide
NaOH - Sodium Hydroxide
Emphasizing stoichiometry for calculating molarity, volume, and concentrations regarding tittrations and reactions in general.