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Substances, Mixtures, Solubility

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Title: Substances, Mixtures, Solubility


1
Substances, Mixtures, Solubility
  • What is a Substance?

2
Substance-
matter that has a fixed composition.
-cant be broken down by physical processes
3
Physical -Boiling -Change
pressure -Cooling -Sorting
Chemical -Burning -Reacting with
chemicals -Reacting with light
4
Examples of substances
Elements- Atoms of different kinds
- Different s of protons Ex. O, S, C, Fe, Au
etc. Compounds- Substances made of 2 or more
elements chemically combined - Fixed composition
(atomic ratios) Ex. H2O, NaCl ex. H2O is always
H2O not H3O or H2O2
5
Mixtures-
  • Made of 2 or more substances (mixed together)
  • CAN BE separated physically
  • CAN BE put together in any proportion

6
2 Types of Mixtures
  • Heterogeneous Mixture-
  • different throughout
  • Homogeneous Mixture-
  • same throughout (solution)

7
Solution-
  • Evenly mixed on a molecular level but NOT bonded
    together
  • Ex. Saltwater

8
2 Parts of a Solution
  • Solute gets dissolved
  • Ex. salt
  • Solvent- does the dissolving
  • Ex. Water

9
Types of Solutions
  • Liquid Solutions

Gaseous Solutions
Solid Solutions
10
Liquid Solution-
  • A solution having a liquid solvent

-Solute can be
Solid salt water Liquid vinegar water Gas -
pop
11
Gaseous Solution-
  • 2 or more gases in solution
  • Ex. Air

12
Solid Solution-
  • 2 or more solids in solution
  • Ex. Steel Iron Carbon

-Melt it , Mix it, Coooooool it down
Alloy- 2 or more metals in solution Ex. Brass
Copper Zinc
13
Solubility
  • The Universal Solvent

WATER!!
Aqueous Solution -
A solution where water is the solvent.
14
Molecular Compounds
  • Compounds Chemically Bonded

- This means that they share electrons (Covalent
Bond)
  • If the electrons are not shared equally the
    molecule is POLAR
  • (has a - end)

Ex. H2O
15
Ionic Bonds
  • Ion -

Atoms with a charge (because theyve gained or
lost electrons)
-
Loses an electron
Gains an electron
e
Na
Cl -
Bonds Together (opposites attract)
16
How Water Dissolves Ionic Compounds
-

H
O
H

-
Negative Ion
  • Positive Ion

17
How Water Dissolves Molecular Compounds
  • H2O gets in between the molecules (separating
    them)
  • Ex. Sugar (also a polar molecule)

18
What Will Dissolve?
  • Like Dissolves Like!!

-Polar molecules dissolve polar molecules
Ex. H2O sugar
- Nonpolar molecules dissolve nonpolar molecules
Oil Nonpolar H2O - Polar
they dont go into solution
19
How Much Will Dissolve?
  • Solubility-

Describes how much solute dissolves in a solvent
(at a given Temp).
(High Solubility - Lots of solute dissolves Low
Solubility Little solute dissolves Insolubile
Very little or NO solute dissolves)
20
Rate of Dissolving
  • - Speed it up by

1. Raise the Temperature
2. Stirring
3. Crush the Solute
21
1. Raise the Temperature
  • Increases molecule movement
  • Mix faster

22
2. Stirring
  • - Puts fresh solvent in contact with solute

23
3. Crush the Solute
  • Exposes more surface to solvent
  • More solvent contact

24
Making Solutions
  • Dilute
  • Concentrated
  • Saturated

25
Dilute -
  • Describes a solution made by dissolving a small
    amount of solute in a large amount of solvent.

26
Concentrated -
  • -Describes a solution made by dissolving a large
    amount of solute in a solvent.

-may be a limit at a certain temperature
27
Saturated -
  • -Describes a solution that has all the solute
    that it can hold without changing conditions.

Temp. amount of solute
SUPER SATURATED
28
Acidic Basic Solutions
  • Acids-

Substances that release positively charged
hydrogen ions (H) in water.
H combines with H2O H3O
29
Properties of Acids
  • 1. Sour taste NEVER TASTE
  • 2. Conducts electricity ex.Battery acid
  • 3. Corrosive- can break down certain substances
    ex. Fabric, paper, skin
  • 4. Solutions can react strongly with some metals

30
Uses Acid
  • Salad dressing acetic acid
  • Citrus fruits citric acid
  • Vitamin C ascorbic acid
  • Ants formic acid
  • Pickling, steal, paint, sulfuric acid
  • Fertalizers, plastics sulfuric acid
  • Cleaning hydrochloric acid
  • Fertilizers, dyes, nitric acid
  • plastics

31
Acids and the Environment
  • Cave formation Carbonic Acid
  • ( CO2) in the soil is dissolved in H2O)
  • - Can dissolve limestone (calcium carbonate)

32
Acids and the Environment
  • ACID RAIN
  1. Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides are released
    into the air - power plants etc.
  2. These react with H2O in the air to form nitric
    acid and sulfuric acid
  3. When it rains Acid Rain

33
Acidic Basic Solutions
  • Bases-

Substances that accept hydrogen ions (H).
When bases dissolve in H2O
H2O looses H OH - hydroxide ion

O
H
O
-

H
H
H
34
Properties of Bases
  • 1. Bitter taste NEVER TASTE
  • 2. Feels slippery - soap
  • 3. Corrosive- can break down certain substances
    ex. Burns, tissue damage
  • 4. Contains ions
  • - Conducts electricity
  • - does not react with metals like acids

35
Uses Base
  • Soaps OH- interacts strongly
  • Cleaning products with dirt and grease.
  • Oven cleaner ex. Lye sodium hydroxide
  • Chalk
  • blood
  • Lime - CaOH - marks lines on sports fields

36
What is pH?
  • pH- a measure of how acidic or how basic a
  • solution is.

Basic
Acidic
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Most Acidic Ex. Hydrochloric Acid (HCL)
Most Basic Ex. Sodium Hydroxide (NaOH)
Neutral
37
The pH scale-
  • One pH unit represents a TENFOLD change in the
    acidity

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
100 x more basic
10 x more acidic
38
Strengths of Acids Bases
  • The weaker the acid, the higher the pH ex. Food
  • The stronger the acid, the lower the pH
  • ex. Dangerous burns

Basic
Acidic
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Neutral
39
-The strength is related to the number of H ions
it donates
  • Hydronium ions H3O Acid strength
  • Lower pH
  • H donated

40
Indicators-
  • Compounds that react with acidic or basic
    solutions producing certain colors depending on
    the solutions pH.

Ex. Cabbage Juice
  • Ex. Litmus soaked into paper strips
  • Turns --- RED in Acid
  • --- BLUE in Base

41
Neutralization-
  • The interaction between H of an acid and OH- of
    a base to form H2O and salt.

Ex. Antacid (Magnesium Hydroxide (Mg(OH)2)
  • How Neutralization Occurs
  • H3O OH- 2 H2O

H
O
H
H
O
O
O
H
H
H
H
pH 7 neutral
H
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