Chemistry B Unit 2

24 July 2022
4.7 (114 reviews)
91 test answers

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers (87)
question
What factors affect how fast a substance dissolves?
answer
agitation, temperature, particle size of teh solute
question
How can you describe the equilibrium in a saturated solution?
answer
in a saturated solution, a state of dynamic equilibrium exists between the solution and any undissolved solute, provided that the temperature remains constant
question
What factors affect the solubility of a substance?
answer
temperature affects the solubility of solid, liquid, and gaseous solutes in a solvent; both temperature and pressure affect the solubility of gaseous solutes
question
Identify the units usually used to express the solubility of a solute.
answer
grams of solute per 100g of solvent (g/100g); grams per liter of solution (g/L)
question
Examine the factors that determine the mass of a solute that will dissolve in a given mass of solvent.
answer
temperature affects the solubility of a solid solutes in a solvent; both temperature and pressure affect the solubility of gaseous solutes in a solvent. This means that temperature and pressure affect how much of a solute will dissolve in a solvent.
question
saturated solution
answer
a solution that contains the maximum amount of solute for a given quantity of solvent at a constant temperature and pressure
question
solubility
answer
the amount of solute that dissolves in a given quantity of a solvent at a specified temperature and pressure to produce a saturated solution
question
unsaturated solution
answer
a solution that contains less solute that a saturated solution at a given temperature and pressure
question
miscible
answer
when two liquids dissolve in each other in all proportions; the liquid that is present in the larger amount is considered the solvent
question
immiscible
answer
liquids that are insoluble in one another
question
supersaturated solution
answer
contains more solute than it can theoretically hold at a given temperature
question
Henry's law
answer
at a given temperature, the solubility (S) of a gas in a liquid is directly proportional to the pressure (P) of the gas above the liquid S1/P1 = S2/P2
question
How does agitation affect dissolving?
answer
dissolving occurs at the surface of solute, agitation (stirring or shaking) continuously brings fresh solvent into contact with the solute; this speeds of dissolving
question
How does temperature affect dissolving?
answer
the increase of kinetic energy causes the particles of the solvent to collide with the particles of the solute, this causes the solute to break apart and dissolve faster
question
How does particle size of the solute affect dissolving?
answer
the smaller the particles are, the more surface area of the solute will be exposed to the solvent; this causes the solute to dissolve faster
question
How does temperature affect solubility?
answer
the solubility of most solid substances increases as the temperature of the solvent increases; some solid substances decrease in solubility as the temperature of the solvent increases. the solubility of most gases are greater in cold water than in hot
question
How does pressure affect solubility?
answer
changes in pressure have little effect on the solubility of solids in liquids. gas solubility increases as the partial pressure of the gas above the solution increases
question
Which of the following usually makes a substance dissolve faster in a solvent? a. agitating the solution b. increasing the particle size fo the solute c. lowering the temperature d. decreasing the number of particles
answer
a.
question
Which of the following expressions is generally used for solubility? a. grams of solute per 100 grams of solvent b. grams of solvent for 100 mililiters of solute c. grams of solute per 100 grams of solution d. grams of solute per 100 mililiters of solution
answer
a.
question
If a cyrstal added to an aqueous solution causes many particles to come out of the solution, the original solution was ________. a. unsaturated b. saturated c. an emulsion d. superstaturated
answer
d.
question
What happens to the solubility of a gas, in a liquid, if the partial pressure of the gas above the liquid decreases? a. the solubility decreases b. the solubility increases c. the solubility remains the same d. the solubility cannot be determined
answer
a.
question
How do you calculate molarity of a solution?
answer
to calculate the molarity of a solution, divide the number of moles of the solute by the volume of the solution in liters Molarity (M) = moles of solute / liters of solution
question
What effect does dilution have on the amount of solute?
answer
diluting a solution reduces the number of moles of solute per unit volume, but the total number of moles of solute in the solution does not change
question
How do percent by volume and percent by mass differ?
answer
percent by volume of a solution is the ratio of the volume of solute to the volume of solution, whereas percent by mass is the ratio of the mass of the solute to the mass of the solution
question
One saline solution contains 0.90g NaCl in exactly 100 mL of solution. What is the molarity of the solution?
answer
M = (0.90g NaCl)/(100 mL) * (1 mol NaCl)/(58.5g NaCl) * (100 mL)/(1 L) M = (0.90)/(100) * (1 mol NaCl)/(58.5) * (100)/(1 L) M = 0.15 mol/L =0.15M
question
concentration of a solution
answer
a measure of the amount of solute that is dissolved in a given quantity of solvent
question
dilute solution
answer
a solution that contains a relatively small amount of solute
question
concentrated solution
answer
a solution that contains a large amount of solute
question
How can concentration by expressed quantitatively?
answer
in molarity
question
molarity (M)
answer
the number of moles of solute dissolved in one liter of solution; molar concentration
question
What is the equation that shows the relationship between molarity and volume of two solutions?
answer
M1 * V1 = M2 * V2
question
How many mililiters of aqueous 2.00 M MgSO4 solution must be diluted with water to prepare 100.0 mL of aqueous 0.400 M MgSO4?
answer
M1*V1=M2*V2 V1 = M2*V2/M1 V1 = (0.400M * 100.0 mL)/2.00M V1 = (0.400 * 100.0 mL)/2.00 V1 = 20.0 mL
question
percent by volume formula
answer
Percent by volume (%(v/v)) = (volume of solute)/(volume of solution) * 100%
question
When do you use the percent by volume to find the concentration?
answer
when both the solute and the solvent are liquids
question
What is the percent by volume of ethanol (C2H6O) in the final solution when 85 mL of ethanol is diluted to a volume of 250 mL with water?
answer
%(v/v) = (volume of solute)/(volume of solution) * 100% %(v/v) = 85 mL ethanol/250 mL * 100% %(v/v) = 85 ethanol/250 * 100% 34% ethanol (v/v)
question
What are three ways to calculate the concentration of a solution?
answer
molarity, percent by volume, percent by mass
question
percent by mass volume formula
answer
Percent by volume (%(m/m)) = (mass of solute)/(mass of solution) * 100%
question
How many grams of glucose are needed to make 2000 g of a 2.8% glucose (m/m) solution?
answer
2.8% = (2.8 g glucose)/(100 g solution) 2000 g solution * (2.8 g glucose)/(100 g solution) 2000 * (2.8 g glucose)/(100) 56 g glucose
question
In which of the following is the solution concentration expressed in terms of molarity? a. 10g of solute / 1000 g of solution b. 10g of solute / 1000 mL of solution c. 10 mL of solute / 1 L of solution d. 10 mol of solute / 1 L of solution
answer
d.
question
What does NOT change when a solution is diluted by the addition of solvent?
answer
number of moles of solute
question
If the percent by volume is 2.0% and the volume of solution is 250 mL, what is the volume of solute in solution?
answer
5.0 mL
question
What are three colligative properties of solutions?
answer
vapour-pressure lowering, freezing-point depression, and boiling point elevation
question
colligative property
answer
a property of solutions that depends only upon the number of solute particles, not upon their identity
question
What is vapour-pressure lowering?
answer
a solution that contains a solute that is nonvolatile (not easily vapourised) always has a lower vapour pressure than the pure solvent; in an aqueous solution, within the liquid and at the surface, ions are surrounded by layers of associated water molecules, or shells of water of solvation, the formation of these shells decreases number of solvent molecules that have enough kinetic energy to escape as vapour. Ionic solutes that dissociate have greater effects on vapour pressure, because the vapour pressure is affected by the number of particles and the ions in ionic compounds split up when dissolved
question
What is freezing-point depression?
answer
when a substance freezes, its particles take on an orderly pattern, the presence of a solute disrupts this pattern because of the shells of water of solvation, as a result, more kinetic energy must be withdrawn from a solution than a pure solvent to solidify; the difference in temperature between the freezing point of a solution and the freezing point of the pure solvent is called the freezing-point depression
question
What is boiling-point elevation?
answer
because adding a nonvolatile solute lowers the vapour-pressure of a solution, it takes more kinetic energy to raise the vapour pressure of the liquid, therefor, the boiling point is higher. The difference in temperature between the boiling point of a solution and the boiling point of the pure solvent is the boiling-point elevation
question
Which of the following pairs of factors affects the solubility of a particular substance? a. temperature and the nature of solute and solvent b. temperature and degree of mixing c. particle size and degree of mixing d. particle size and temperature
answer
a.
question
In a concentrated solution there is ____. a. no solvent b. a large amount of solute c. a small amount of solute d. no solute
answer
b.
question
Which of the following operations yields the number of moles of solute? a. molarity * moles of solution b. molarity * liters of solution c. molarity * mass of solution d. moles of solutions / volume of solution
answer
b.
question
To 225 mL of a 0.80M solution of KI, a student adds enough water to make 1.0 L of a more dilute KI solution. What is the molarity of the new solution?
answer
0.18M
question
Which of the following is NOT a colligative property of a solution? a. boiling point elevation b. supersaturation c. vapour pressure lowering d. freezing point depression
answer
b.
question
A solute depresses the freezing point because the solute ______________. a. is colder than the solvent b. disrupts crystal formation of the solvent c. tends to sink to the bottom of the solution d. has bigger molecules than the solvent
answer
b.
question
How many milliliters of alcohol are in 167 mL of an 85.0% (v/v) alcohol solution?
answer
142 mL
question
What are two ways of expressing the ratio of solute to solvent in a solution?
answer
Chemists use two ways to express the ratio of solute particles to solvent particles: in molality and in mole fractions
question
How are freezing-point depression and boiling-point elevation related to molality?
answer
The magnitudes of the freezing point depression and the boiling point elevation of a solution are directly proportional to the molal concentration (m), assuming the solute is molecular, not ionic.
question
molality (m)
answer
the number of moles of solute dissolved in 1 kilogram (1000 grams) of solvent; known as molal concentration Molality (m) = moles of solute / kilogram of solvent
question
How many grams of potassium iodide must be dissolved in 500.0 g of water to produce a 0.060 molal KI solution?
answer
0.060 mol KI / 1.000 kg H2O 166.0 g KI / 1 mol KI 0.5000 kg H20 * 0.060 mol KI / 1.000 kg H2O * 166.0 g KI / 1 mol KI 0.5000 * 0.060 / 1.000 * 166.0 / 1 mol KI = 5.0 g KI
question
mole fraction
answer
the ratio of the moles of the solute to the total number of moles of solvent and solute
question
Ethylene glycol (EG, or C2H6O2) is added to automobile cooling systems to protect against cold weather. What is the mole fraction of each component in a solution containing 1.25 mol of ethylene glycol and 4.00 mol of water?
answer
X(sub)EG = n(sub)EG / n(sub)EG + n(sub)H2O X(sub)H20 = n(sub)H2O / n(sub)EG + n(sub)H2O X(sub)EG = 1.25 mol / 1.25 mol + 4.00 mol = 0.238 X(sub)H20 = 4.00 mol / 1.25 mol + 4.00 mol = 0.762
question
molal freezing-point depression constant (K(sub)f)
answer
a constant that is equal to the change in freezing point for a 1-molal solution of a nonvolatile molecular solute T(sub)f = K(sub)f * m (molality)
question
Antifreeze protects a car from freezing. It also protects it from overheating. Calculate the freezing-point depression of a solution containing exactly 100 g of ethylene glycol (C2H6O2) antifreeze in 0.500 kg of water.
answer
100 g C2H6O2 * 1 mol C2H6O2 / 62.0 g C2H6O2 = 1.61 mol C2H6O2 m (molality) = mol solute / kg solvent = 1.61 mol / 0.500 kg = 3.22 m ∆ T(sub)f = K(sub)f * m (molality) = 1.86˚ C/m * 3.22m = 5.99˚C
question
molal boiling-point elevation constant (K(sub)b)
answer
a constant that is equal to the change in boiling point for a 1-molal solution of a nonvolatile molecular solute T(sub)b = K(sub)b * m (molality)
question
What is the boiling point of a 1.50m NaCl solution?
answer
∆T(sub)b = K(sub)b * m = 0.512˚C/m * 3.00m = 1.54˚C T(sub)b = 100˚C + 1.54˚C
question
How did Arrhenius define an acid and a base?
answer
According to Arrhenius, acids are hydrogen-containing compounds that ionize to yield hydrogen ions (H+) in aqueous solution. Bases are compounds that ionize to yield hydroxide ions (OH-) in aqueous solution.
question
Arrhenius' list of six common acids
answer
hydrochloric acid (HCl), nitric acid (HNO3), sulfuric acid (H2SO4), phosphoric acid (H3 PO4), ethanoic acid (CH3COOH), carbonic acid (H2CO3)
question
What is a hydronium ion?
answer
H3O +, is the ion that forms when a water molecule gains a hydrogen ion
question
How are [H+] and [OH-] related in an aqueous solution?
answer
for aqueous solutions, the product of the hydrogen-ion concentratoin and the hydroxide-ion concentration equals 1.0 x 10 ^-14
question
What is self-ionisation of water?
answer
when the collision between water molecules are energetic enough to cause a hydrogen ion to transfer from one water molecule to another. The two water molecules become (H3O +) and (OH -) H20 <-> H+(aq) + OH-(aq)
question
neutral solution
answer
any aqueous solution in which [H +] and [OH -] are equal
question
ion-product constant for water (K(sub)w)
answer
the product of the concentrations of the hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions K(sub)w = [H +] * [OH -] = 1.0 * 10 ^-14
question
acidic solution
answer
a solution in which [H +] is greater than [OH -] [H +] is greater than 1*10 ^-7 M
question
basic solution
answer
a solution in which [H +] is one less than [OH -] [H +] is less than 1*10 ^-7 M
question
If the [H +] in a solution is 1.0*10 ^-5 M, is the solution acidic basic, or neutral? What is the [OH -] of this solution?
answer
1.0*10 ^-5 M > 1*10 ^-7 M, therefor the solution is acidic 1*10 ^-14 M / 1.0*10 ^-5 M = 1.0*10 ^-9 M = [OH -]
question
How is pH used to classify a solution as neutral, acidic, or basic?
answer
A solution with a pH less than 7.0 is acidic. A solution with a pH of 7.0 neutral. A solution with a pH greater than 7.0 is basic.
question
How to calculate the pH.
answer
pH = - log [H +]
question
What is the pH of a solution with a hydrogen-ion concentration of 4.2 * 10 ^-10 ?
answer
pH = - log [H +] pH = - log [4.2 * 10 ^-10] pH = -(-9.38) pH = 9.38
question
The pH of an unknown solution is 6.35. What is the hydrogen-ion concentration of the solution?
answer
pH = - log [H +] 6.35 = - log [H +] log[H +] = -6.35 [H +] = antilog(-6.35) [H +] = 4.5 * 10 ^-7 M
question
What is the pH of a solution if [OH -] = 4.0*10 ^-11 M?
answer
1*10 ^-14 M / 4.0*10 ^-11 M = 2.5*10 ^-4 M = [H +] pH = - log [2.5 * 10 ^-4] pH = -(-3.60) pH = 3.60
question
What are two methods that are used to measure pH?
answer
Either acid-base indicators of pH meters can be used to measure pH.
question
How are acids and bases classified as either strong or weak?
answer
Acids and bases are classified as strong or weak based on the degree to which they ionise in water.
question
strong acid
answer
an acid that is completely ionised in aqueous solution
question
weak acid
answer
an acid ionises only slightly in aqueous solution
question
acid dissociation constant (K(sub)a)
answer
the ratio of the concentration of the dissociated form of an acid to the concentration of the undissociated form
question
Example equilibrium-constant equation with ethanoic acid (CH3COOH)
answer
K(sub)eq = [H3O +] * [CH3COO -][CH3COOH] * [H2O]
question
Example acid dissociation constant equation with ethanoic acid (CH3COOH)
answer
K(sub)eq * [H2O] = K(sub)a = [H3O +] * [CH3COO][CH3COOH]
question
True or false: the greater the K(sub)a value the stronger the acid.
answer
True
question
To find the value of K(sub)a of an acid in water what equation must you use and what do the variables mean?
answer
K(sub)a = [H +][A -]/[HA] [HA] is the equilibrium concentrations of the acid [A -] is the anion from the dissociation of the acid [H +] is the hydrogen ion
question
In a 0.1000M solution of ethanoic acid, [H +] = 1.34 * 10 ^-3M. Calculate K(sub)a of the this acid. Refer to Table 19.7 for the ionisation equation for the ethanoic acid.
answer
[H +] = [CH2COO -] = 1.34 * 10 ^-3M (0.1000 - 0.00134)M = 0.0987M K(sub)a = ([H +] * [CH3COO -]) / [CH3COOH] =((1.34 * 10 ^-3) * (1.34 * 10 ^-3)) / 0.0987 =1.82 * 10 ^-5
question
strong base
answer
a base that dissociates completely into metal ions and hydroxide ions in an aqueous solution
question
weak base
answer
a base that reacts with water for form the conjugate acid of the base and hydroxide ions
question
base dissociation constant (K(sub)b)
answer
the ratio of the concentration fo the conjugate acid times the concentration of the hydroxide ion to the concentration of the base