Solution and suspension Flashcards

1
Q

What are mixtures

A

Combinations of two or more substances which are not chemically joined together. Each chemical has their own chemical and physical properties

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2
Q

What is homogeneous mixture

A

A mixture that has a uniform appearance throughout

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3
Q

Descriptions of homogeneous mixture

A

The physical and chemical properties are same in every part of the mixture.
They are generally called solutions.
The components are not distinguishable

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4
Q

What is a heterogeneous mixture

A

A mixture that does not have the same composition and appearance throughout

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5
Q

Descriptions of heterogeneous mixture

A

the physical and chemical properties are not the same in every part of the mixture
They have visible diff phases or physical states
The components are distinguishable

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6
Q

What is a solution

A

A solution is a mixture consisting of particles of two or more substances that are distributed evenly throughout

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7
Q

What is a solute

A

It is a substance that is dissolved in another substance

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8
Q

What is a solvent

A

It is a substance that dissolves another substance

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9
Q

What is dissolving

A

Process in which particles of substance separate and spread evenly throughout the mixture

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10
Q

How to identify the physical state of the solution based on the state of solute and solvent

A

The state of the solution is the same as the state of the solvent

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11
Q

What is water

A

It is the universal solvent because there are many substances that can dissolve in it.

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12
Q

Characteristics of aqueous solution

A
  • cannot be filtered, no residue left on filter paper when filtration is carried out
  • clear and transparent, allows light to pass through
  • when left to stand, no particles sink to the bottom of the container
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13
Q

Why is there no residue when a solution is filtered

A

The particles of the solute are so small that they are able to pass through the solution

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14
Q

Why is light able to pass through a solution

A

The particles of the solute are too small to block any light passing through the solution

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15
Q

What is a suspension

A

A suspension is a mixture containing insoluble solid particles suspended in a medium such as air or water

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16
Q

The characteristics of a suspension

A
  • A suspension can be filtered by filtration , residue left on filter paper
  • it does not allow light to pass through , it scatters light when light is shone on it
  • when left to stand, the particles settle to teh bottom of the container
17
Q

Why are there residues left on filter paper when a suspension is filtered

A

The particles of the solute are too large that they are not able to pass through the pores of the filter paper

18
Q

Why is light unable to pass through a suspension

A

The particles of the solute are large enough to block any light passing through the suspension

19
Q

What is concentration of solutions

A

It is a measure of the amount of solute dissolved in a given amount of solvent

20
Q

What are the 3 types of solution

A

1)dilute

2) concentrated
3) saturated

21
Q

What is the formula of concentration

A

Concentration (g/cm3) = mass of solute (g) / volume of solvent (cm3)

22
Q

What is solubility

A

It is the maximum amount of solute which can dissolve in 100g water at fixed temperature

23
Q

The 3 factors that affect solubility

A

1) type of solvent
2) type of solute
3) temperature

24
Q

Explanation type of solvent

A

The ability of a solvent to dissolve a given solute.

25
Q

Explanation of type of solute

A

The ability for a solute to dissolve in a given solvent

26
Q

Explanation of temperature

A

The effect of hotness and coldness of a solvent.
The solubility of solids and liquids increases with increasing temperature. For gases their solubility decreases with increasing temperature.

27
Q

Define soluble and insoluble

A

Soluble- when a substance is able to dissolve in a solvent

Insoluble- when a substance is not able to dissolve in a solvent

28
Q

Define solubility curve

A

A solubility curve is a graph showing the maximum amount of solute that can dissolve in 100g water at a given temperature to form a saturated solution

29
Q

What does it mean when solubility is above the line, on the line, below the line

A

Above the line- beyond saturated (undissolved solute remains in the solution)

On the line- saturated solution (corresponding to each particular temperature)

Below the line- unsaturated solution (could be dilute or concentrated only)

30
Q

Rate of dissolving of substances

A

It is a measure of how fast a solute dissolves in a fixed amount of solvent completely

31
Q

Factors affecting rate of dissolving

A

1) stirring effect
2) amount of solvent
3) particle size
4) temperature

32
Q

Effect of stirring effect

A

When stirring effect increases, the rate of solubility increases

33
Q

Effect of amount of solvent

A

When the amount of solvent increases, the rate of solubility increases

34
Q

Effect of particle size

A

When the particle size decreases, the rate of solubility increases

35
Q

Effect of temperature

A

When the temperature increases, the rate if solubility of a solute(liquid or solid) increases