DE Chemistry – King William High School
…are homogeneous mixtures Solute (Kool-Aid) + solute (water) “like dissolves like”…(polar dissolves polar & nonpolar dissolves nonpolar) Why does oil not mix with water?
Ionic solids break up into their ions in water through a process called hydration (water molecules surround them) EX: NaCl EX: CaCl 2
Electrolytes dissociate in water and can produce an electric current IONIC Strong electrolytes completely dissociate EX: MgSO 4 Weak electrolytes partially dissociate EX: NH 4 OH
Do NOT separate into ions in water and therefore do NOT conduct an electric current COVALENT EX: sugar (sucrose)
Saturated solution - contains the maximum amount of solute that can dissolve in the solvent Unsaturated solution – is dilute…can hold more solute
The hotter a solution is…the more solute you can dissolve Supersaturated solutions – contains more solute than its solubility allows
The solubility of a gas in a liquid (CO 2 in your soda) is directly proportional to the pressure of the gas above the liquid Why does your soda go “flat” after it has been opened?
Page 294; Table 9.8 EX: K 2 S EX: Ca(NO 3 ) 2 EX: PbCl 2 EX: AlPO 4
Mass percent = EX: What is the mass percent of NaOH in a solution prepared by dissolving 30.0 g NaOH in g of water?
M = mol/L EX: What is the molarity of 60.0 g of NaOH in 250 mL of solution?
MV = MV What volume of 18.0 M HCl do you need to prepare 500 mL of 2.0 M HCl?
Colloids – are homogenous mixtures where the particles are bigger than solute particles…and they do not “settle” out of solution Colloid examples on page 305 – table 9.12 Suspensions – heterogeneous mixtures (their particles tend to “settle” out over time