Solutions Flashcards
If there are 8 M of NaCl that completely dissociates into 4 L of water, what is the concentration of the solutes in water?
4 M of solutes in water.
What is Ksp?
Ksp is the solubility product constant and is the saturation point of a compound. The saturation point (Ksp) (a.k.a. equilibrium) is where the rate of dissociation = the rate of precipitation.
- It is similar to Keq in the fact that it is products over reactants. The coefficient will become the exponent and the coefficient in the equation.
- Pure solids and liquids do not appear in the “K” (Keq, Ksp, etc…) constants’ equations.
How does temperature affect Ksp?
Increasing the temperature increases Ksp and decreasing the temperature decreases Ksp.
- Temperature and Ksp are directly related.
What is the Ion product and what is its purpose?
The ion product’s purpose is to relate the current solubility state of a system to the system’s equilibrium. Ion product is calculated the exact same way as Ksp.
- If the ion product is below Ksp, the solution is designated as unsaturated
- If the ion product is equal to Ksp, the solution is designated as saturated.
- If the ion product is above Ksp, the solution is designated as supersaturated. (Precipitate will form until the solution returns to saturation (Ksp).
- Ion product is analogous to reaction quotient (Q) during equilibriums.
Solid NaCl is dissolved in pure H₂O and the molar solubility of NaCl is calculated. If later, solid NaCl is dissolved in a new solution already containing chloride ions, the new molar solubility of NaCl will be:
A. Lower
B. Remain the same
C. Higher
The new molar solubility of NaCl will be lower.
The common ion effect inhibits ion dissociation and therefore decreases the molar solubility of a compound. The Ksp, however, remains the same provided that the temperature and pressure (if gasses are involved) remain the same as well.
What is the common ion effect?
Solubility of a salt is reduced by the presence of one of its constituent ions in a solution.
- Ex: If an ion is already dissolved in solution (AgNO3), adding more of that ion (AgCl) will not allow as much of it to dissolve as if it were added separately.
- Will not change Ksp but will change the molar solubility.
What is the saturation point?
The saturation point (also known as Ksp) is the rate at which an ionic compound’s dissociation in solution is equal to the rate of precipitation out of solution.
What is Kf?
Kf is the formation constant at which gives the strength of reagent interactions that form complexes.
- Simplified, it is the constant that describes how easy two or more atoms form a complex.