When a substance is dissolved in a suitable liquid a solution is formed- substance that is dissolved = solute- substance that dissolves solute = solvent
there is a limit to how much solute can be dissolved in a particular solvent (amount varies with temperature) - when a solvent has dissolved as much solute as it can it is saturated solubility of a substance depends on:- nature of solute- nature of solvent- temperature
litres = dm3number of moles/molarity = volume in dm3
1dm
1dm3 = 1000cm31cm3 = .001dm3
if
if given mass of solute use molar mass to figure out how many moles there arethen use the volume or molarity to figure out the unknown molarity/volume
don't forget about empirical formula when figuring out how many moles there are
- form of calcium carbonate- other forms: chalk, marble, calcite- has many uses and can be converted into other calcium compounds
Uses:- neutralize acid soils- stone sculptors use it because:= it carves really well= beautiful= lasts for a really long timeconstruction:- glass,- concrete- cementMedicineToothpasteAdded to BreadVital in Extraction of IronMade from remains of cells of sea creaturesformed under the sea
acid + calcium carbonate = neutral solutionfinding an alternative as good as limestone is difficultcalcium carbonate can be processeddecomposes into carbon dioxide and calcium oxidecalcium oxide is used in the manufacturing of steel
Rea
1. Calcium Carbonate is heated= CaO (+ CO2)2. Water is added to the productCaO + H2O = Ca(OH)2 3. Carbon dioxide is bubbled through the limewaterCa(OH)2 + CO2 = CaCO3 + H2O
First, memorize that all common Group 1A metal ionic compounds (that which contain Li, Na, K, Rb, or Cs) are soluble.
First, memorize that all common Group 1A metal ionic compounds (that which contain Li, Na, K, Rb, or Cs) are soluble.
Then memorize that all common NH4 (ammonium) ionic compounds are also soluble in water. Compounds with an H+ cation (like HCl, hydrochloric acid) also tend to be soluble, as these are generally acids.
N
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCIRAPzHTfA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCIRAPzHTfA
Solutions
Concentration of Solutions
Limestone
Solubility
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