Chapter 7 Solution Chemistry Flashcards
Solute
The substance that is dissolved
Solvent
The thing doing the dissolving
Solubility
The maximum amount of solute that will dissolve in a given substance
Molar solubility
The solubility given in units of moles per liter
How to get a solubility to the molar solubility
Use the molar mass to get it to moles per liter
like dissolves like
Like dissolves like means that a solute will dissolve in a solvent if both contain similar types of intermolecular forces and are of a similar magnitude
Would you expect NaCl to dissolve in oil, which is non-polar
No. NaCl is ionic, so it has a positive and a negative, oil is non polar
Is Br2 more soluble in CS2 or NH3
CS2 because it is nonpolar (;
How to do dilution calculations
- Write the molarity as a ratio. M/L
- multiply it by the (volume of the original/new volume of diluted)
- Clap because you are done
Setup this… “Calculate the concentration that results when 18 L of .40M K2CrO4 is added to 20. L of water
.40mol/liter = 18L/20L
It is a dilution
How to dilution calculations for mixed solutions… Good luck
- Calculate the concentration for each compound as you would in a normal dilution.
- Write a complete dissociation formula for each of the 2 compounds.
- Place the concentration from step 1 under each element from each respective compound. Use stoics for multiple of one element.
- The 2 compounds should share an element. To find this concentration, add both of the shared concentrations together.
- List each elements concentration
- Get girlfriend, and call it good
How to calculate the concentration of an unknown acid
- Write out the balanced equation for the reaction, yes, this uses stoich
- Calculate the moles of the substance you know with the molar mass and the given concentration
- Convert moles of one acid to moles of another acid using the stoichiometric proportions (big word😜=sound smarter than I actually am)
- Put the moles of the desired substance over liters of the desired substance.
- Profit
Gnomesand
A cooler way of asking a person if they know what you mean/understand what you are saying to them. Usually attached to the end of sentences for added effect.
When said normally in a sentence “gnomesand” sounds like “know what I’m saying,” phonetically. If the word is said fast enough, the listener won’t be able to tell the difference.
This makes for an awesome addition to one’s everyday hip vocabulary without all the ghettoness of true Ebonics.
Example Senario. “Hey Kyle did you catch that new Terminator movie? I thought it was pretty good, but it doesn’t even equal the caliber of the first two movies, gnomesand?”
Solution
A homogeneous mixture that exists in one phase