Solubility

Descrição

GCSE Chemistry (C3) Mapa Mental sobre Solubility, criado por jadepalmer98 em 08-11-2013.
jadepalmer98
Mapa Mental por jadepalmer98, atualizado more than 1 year ago
jadepalmer98
Criado por jadepalmer98 aproximadamente 12 anos atrás
97
0

Resumo de Recurso

Solubility
  1. Proper definitions
    1. The solubility of a substance in a given solvent is the number of grams of the solute(usually a solid) that dissolve in 100g of the solvent(the liquid) at a particular temperature
      1. Eg. at room temperature (20 degrees), about 36g of sodium chloride (NaCl) will dissolve in 100g of water
      2. The solubility of a (solid) solutes usually increases with temperature
        1. Eg. at 60 degrees, about 37g of sodium chloride (NaCl) will dissolve in 100g of water
        2. A saturated solution is one that cannot hold any more solid at that temperature - and you have to be able to see solid on the bottom to be certain that its saturated
        3. Solubility Curves show when a solution is saturated
          1. 1 - A solubility curve plots the mass of solute dissolved in a saturated solution at various temperatures
            1. 2 - The solubility of most solids increases as the temperature increases
              1. 3 - This means that cooling a saturated solution will usually cause some solid to crystallise out - that means it separates from the solution
                1. 4 - The mass of crystals formed by cooling a solution a certain amount can be calculated from a solubility curve...

                  Anotações:

                  • Draw lines perpendicular to both axes through the temperatures in the question, then subtract the smaller mass from the larger - that difference will precipitate out on cooling.
                  1. Ex - What mass of solid copper sulphate will crystallise when a saturated solution containing 100g of water is cooled from 100 degrees to 20 degrees?
                    1. Answer - 75g - 20g = 55g
                2. All gases are soluble - to some extent, anyway
                  1. Chlorine water is a solution of chlorine gas in water
                    1. Used as a bleach in paper and textiles industries
                      1. Also to sterilise water supplies - kills bacteria
                    2. The amount of gas that dissolves depends on the pressure of the gas above it - the higher the pressure, the more gas that dissolves
                      1. Fizzy drinks initially contain a lot of CO2 dissolved in water - pressure released when lid removed, CO2 fizzes out of solution
                      2. But gases become less soluble as the temperature of the solvent increases - opposite of solids
                        1. Aquatic life needs dissolved oxygen, but levels in rivers can be lowered by pollution and a rise in temperature (caused by warm water discharged from towns and industries) causing problems

                      Anexos de mídia

                      Semelhante

                      Tests for Positive Ions: Flame Test Colours
                      bella.mort
                      Acids and Bases
                      Sarah Egan
                      Using GoConqr to study science
                      Sarah Egan
                      Ionic Bondic Flashcards.
                      anjumn10
                      Electrolysis
                      lisawinkler10
                      Acids and Bases
                      silviaod119
                      Elements, Compounds and Mixtures
                      silviaod119
                      Chemistry General Quiz - 2
                      lauren_johncock
                      Chemistry Quiz General -3
                      lauren_johncock
                      Chemistry Module C2: Material Choices
                      James McConnell
                      AS Chemistry - Enthalpy Changes
                      Sarah H-V