Chem 17 Post Lab 1
Chem 17 Post Lab 1
Chem 17 Post Lab 1
Experiments 1 3
15 February 2015
Experiment 1: Colligative
Properties of Solutions
Solution solute: dispersed
component or
inner phase
solvent: dispersing medium
or
outer phase
Note: a solution will always have a
lower VP, lower FP and higher BP
compared to a pure solvent
Experiment 1: Colligative
Properties of Solutions
Types of Disperse Systems
The term "Disperse System" refers
to a system in which one
substance (the dispersed
phase) is distributed, in discrete
units, throughout a second
substance (the continuous
phase or vehicle).
Each phase can exist in solid,
liquid, or gaseous state .
Experiment 1: Colligative
Properties of Solutions
Types of Disperse Systems
Medium/Phase
Gas
Gas
Dispersed phase
Liquid
Solid
None
miscible)
Liquid
Foam
(whipped cream,
shaving cream)
Solid
Emulsion
Sol
(milk
(blood
mayonnaise) pigmented ink)
Solid foam
(aerogel, pumice
Gel
(agar, gelatine
polystyrene foam)
jelly, opal)
Solid sol
(jewel, gemstone)
Experiment 1: Colligative
Properties of Solutions
Types of Disperse Systems
Heterogenous
dispersion
> 500 (1000) nm
heterogenous
systems (blood,
milk)
Colloid dispersion
1 500 (1000)
nm
microheterogenou
s system (plasma,
macromolecular
solutions)
True solution
< 1 nm
homogenous
systems, salt, acid
and base solutions
Experiment 1: Colligative
Properties of Solutions
Colligative Properties: properties
that depend entirely on the
amount of solute, not on its
identity, present in a solution
1.
Experiment 1: Colligative
Properties of Solutions
2. FP depression FP: T at which
the liquid and the solid phase are
at equilibrium
3. BP elevation BP: T at which the
VP of of a liquid is equal to the
barometric pressure
Experiment 1: Colligative
Properties of Solutions
4. Osmotic P the difference in the VP
of the pure solvent and the solution of
the solute in that solvent separated by
a semi- permeable membrane
Osmosis passage of solvent
(water),
from low to high
concentration
through a semipermeable
membrane
Experiment 1: Colligative
Properties of Solutions
Sample problems
1. Calculate the FP and BP of a soln
of 383g glucose dissolved in
400g water.
2. What is the boiling point of a
soln of 30.20g ethylene glycol in
88.40 phenol?
3. Calculate the molar mass of a
noneletrolyte that lowers the FP
of 25g of water to -3.9 C when
Experiment 1: Colligative
Properties of Solutions
Sample problems
4. How much glucose per liter should
be used for an intravenous solution
to match the 7.65 atm at 37 C
osmotic pressure of blood?
5. What is the osmotic pressure of a
solution prepared by adding 13.65
g of sucrose (C 12 H 22 O 11 ) to
enough water to make 250 mL of
solution at 25 C?
Experiment 3: Chemical
Kinetics
Chemical kinetics study of rates
and mechanisms of chemical
reactions
Factors that affect reaction rates
1. nature of reactants
2. concentration of reactants
3. temperature
4. catalyst
5. surface area
Experiment 3: Chemical
Kinetics
nature of reactants homogeneity
of the reactants help dictate the
rate of the reaction, acid/base
reactions, the formation of salts,
and ion exchange are fast
reactions while complex
formation reactions are slow
iron + hydrochloric acid vs iron + acetic
acid
Experiment 3: Chemical
Kinetics
Experiment 3: Chemical
Kinetics
presence of catalyst a catalyst is
a substance that participates in a
chemical reaction and increases
the reaction rate without
undergoing a net chemical
change itself
Experiment 3: Chemical
Kinetics
Experiment 3: Chemical
Kinetics
Order of Reactions
Experiment 3: Chemical
Kinetics
Method of initial rates
Experiment 3: Chemical
Kinetics
Theoretical models for Chemical
Kinetics
1. Collision Theory only a fraction
of the collisions among gaseous
molecules lead to chemical
reaction
Experiment 3: Chemical
Kinetics
Transition State Theory a
hypothetical specie (activated
complex) is believed to exist in a
transitory state (transition state)
that lies between the reactants
and the products
Experiment 3: Chemical
Kinetics
Transition State Theory