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Substances, Mixtures and Solubility
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A. A substance is matter that has a fixed composition. 1. An element is an example of a pure substance.
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a. A substance cannot be broken down into simpler parts by ordinary physical processes, such as boiling or grinding.
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b. Only a chemical process, such as burning or reacting with other chemicals, can change a substance into one or more different substances.
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2. Water is a substance that is a compound, a chemical combination of two or more elements.
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B. Mixtures- combinations of substances that are not bonded together and can be separated by physical processes.
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1. Heterogeneous mixtures contain substances that are not mixed evenly and have different compositions in different areas.
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2. Two or more substances evenly mixed on a molecular level but not bonded together are called homogeneous mixture or a solution.
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C. The substance that dissolves in a solution is the solute; the solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute.
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1. A solid that falls out of solution is called a precipitate.
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2. Stalactites and stalagmites in caves are precipitates of minerals that were dissolved in water.
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D. Solutions can be made of different combinations of solids, liquids, and gases.
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1. In a liquid solution, the solute can be another liquid, a solid, or a gas. a. Salt water and sugar water are liquid-solid solutions.
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b. Carbonated beverages are liquid-gas solutions. c. Vinegar is a liquid-liquid solution made of water and acetic acid.
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2. In a gas-gas solution such as air, the larger amount of gas (nitrogen) is the solvent and the smaller amount of gas (oxygen) is the solute.
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3. A solid-solid solution made from two or more metals is called an alloy; sometimes nonmetal elements are included in an alloy.
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a. Brass is an alloy of copper and zinc. b. Steel is an alloy of iron and carbon, which makes the steel stronger and more flexible.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility A. Water, called the universal solvent, forms an aqueous solution with a solute.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 1. Some molecular compounds share electrons in a nonpolar covalent bond; water is a molecule with polar covalent bonds.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 2. Some atoms in compounds lose or gain electrons and become charged atoms called ions.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 3. When an ionic compound is mixed with water, the different ions of the compound are pulled apart, or dissolved, by the water molecules.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 4. Water dissolves molecular compounds like sugar by separating the molecules and spreading them throughout the water.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility B. Substances that dissolve in another substance are called soluble in that substance; substances that do not dissolve in another substance are termed insoluble in that substance.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 1. “Like dissolves like” means that polar molecules dissolve other polar molecules, and nonpolar molecules dissolve other nonpolar molecules.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 2. Nonpolar molecules will not dissolve polar molecules, and vice versa.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility C. Solubility - measurement that describes how much solute dissolves in a given amount of solvent at a given temperature.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 1. Several factors, including time, motion, temperature, and contact area, affect the rate of dissolving.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 2. Some solid solutes become more soluble as the temperature of the liquid solvent increases.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 3. An increase in temperature decreases the solubility of gas in a liquid-gas solution.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 4. A saturated solution contains all the solute it can hold under a given condition.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility D. The concentration of a solution is how much solute is present compared to the amount of solvent.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 1. Concentrated solutions have more solute per given amount of solvent than dilute solutions.
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Ch. 21-2- What is Solubility 2. Concentrations can be stated as a percentage of the volume of solution that is solute.
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