Phase Equilibrium and Solutions Flashcards

1
Q

What is a phase?

A

Part of a system that is homogenous in chemical and physical state throughout and is separated form other phases by a definite boundary

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2
Q

What do the number of phases in liquids depend on?

A

Nature of the components, for a single component there can only be one liquid phase, when more than one component is involved they can form one phase id they mix or two phases if they don’t, whether two liquid mix may change depending on the conditions, mixtures that form a single phase are said to be miscible and those that form more than one are said to be immiscible

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3
Q

What are partially miscible liquids?

A

Mixtures that form one phase under some conditions and more than one under other conditions are partially miscible

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4
Q

What number of phases are there in a gas?

A

In gases and vapours there is plenty of space for the molecules to mix so that there is only ever one phase irrespective of how many components are involved

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5
Q

How do some molecules of a liquid enter the gas phase before the boiling point?

A

Some molecules near the surface of the liquid will have sufficient energy to overcome the attractive interactions with neighbouring molecules and escape into the vapour phase. At higher temperatures liquids have a higher vapour pressure since more molecules have significant energy to escape the liquids

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6
Q

What is the vapour pressure and saturated vapour pressure?

A

If some liquid is placed in a container the vaporised material will exert a pressure - the vapour pressure. if the container is now closed and the temperature is constant the vapour and liquid come to equilibrium and the equilibrium vapour pressure is then called the saturated vapour pressure po

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7
Q

Solids vapour pressure?

A

Solids also exert a vapour pressure although the stronger interactions between molecules mean that it is usually lower than for liquids

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8
Q

Partial vapour pressure?

A

If there are other gases present above the liquid then the pressure due to the vapour in its partial vapour pressure the total pressure in the container will be the vapour pressure of the liquid plus the partial pressure of all other gases present

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9
Q

When does a liquid boil?

A

When the vapour pressure of a liquid becomes equal to the external pressure the liquid boils the pressure of the vapour is large enough to overcome the external pressure on the liquid so bubbles of vapour can form anywhere within the liquid as well as at the surface

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10
Q

What is a phase diagram?

A

Plot of the pressure and temperatures where phase transitions take place

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11
Q

What do the lines show on the diagram?

A

T-A shows the melting temperature changes with pressure at the melting temperature solid and liquid exist in equilibrium
T-C shows how the boiling temperature changes with pressure
B-T solid vapour curve and the liquid vapour curve and the liquid vapour cure T-C also shows how the equilibrium pressure for solid and liquid respectively depends on pressure

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12
Q

What is the triple point?

A

Where the solid, liquid and vapour exist in equilibrium, only set of conditions where the three phases can be in equilibrium, the triple point also represents the lowest temperature at which the substance can exist in the liquid state

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13
Q

Most stable phase for a compound?

A

The most stale tase at a particular temperature and constant pressure is the phase with the lowest Gibbs energy at that temperature

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14
Q

Value of Sm and Gm?

A

The value of Sm is always positive so that Gm decreases aa the temperature rises, the gradient of a plot of Gm against T is negative and equal to -Sm, the molar entropy of the solid Sm is smaller than that of a liquid which is in turn smaller than that of the vapour, therefore the line for the solid in the graph has the smallest slope and the line for the vapour has the steepest slope. At low temperatures the solid phase has the smallest Gm so this is the most stable phase between the melting and boiling temperature Gm is smallest for the liquid phase, the gas phase is more stable above the boiling temperature since it has the smallest Gm at these temperatures

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15
Q

When do phase transitions occur?

A

Melting or freezing at Tm and boiling or condensation at Tb occur where the line intersect, at these temperatures and pressures Gm values for the two phases are equal

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16
Q

What does the Claperyon equation give?

A

The gradient of the lines on a phase diagram in terms of the molar entropy change at the transition

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17
Q

What is the Clausius Calperyon equation?

A

Relates pressure and temperature for phase transition of vaporisation or sublimation so change in enthalpy is enthalpy of vaporisation or enthalpy of sublimation

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18
Q

What is the enthalpy change of vaporisation related to?

A

The energy needed to overcome the intermolecular interactions for 1 mol of liquid, if is therefore a good measure of the strength of these interactions

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19
Q

What happens during vaporisation?

A

A liquid turns into a vapour, provided that there are no very strong interactions between the molecules such as hydrogen bonding most liquids have similar arrangements of molecules, the vapour phase is highly random and disordered no matter what substance is involved, therefore the same degree of change in molecular order and hence in entropy is to be expected as a result of vaporisation whatever the substance provided there are no strong interactions between the molecules

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20
Q

What is Trautons law?

A

Entropy of vaporisation for a liquid = 85
JK-1mol-1
Even liquid with very different boiling point and chemical natures have smiler values of entropy of vaporisation

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21
Q

What do deviation from Trautons law result from?

A

Unusally strong interactions between the molecules in the liquid or vapour

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22
Q

What does the phase of substance depend on?

A

The phase in which a substance exists at a particular temperature and pressure is largely governed by the interactions between its molecules

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23
Q

Intermolecular forces in gases?

A

Interactions between molecules are small except at high pressures

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24
Q

Intermolecular forces in solids and liquids?

A

Held together b attractive interactions between the molecules there are also repulsive interactions due to the overlapping of electron clouds and the place between attractive and repulsive interactions keeps the molecules at equilibrium separation

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25
Q

What happens when there are attractive interactions between molecules?

A

The potential energy becomes more negative as the distance between the molecules decreases

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26
Q

What happens when there are repulsive interactions between molecules?

A

The potential becomes more positive as the molecules move closer together

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27
Q

Ionic interactions?

A

The strongest interactions occur in ionic systems, the energy of the interaction differs according to whether the two ions are in a vacuum, in air in water or in a hydrocarbon solvent. The permittivity accounts for this difference, if the ions have opposite charges the terms in the equations have opposite signs and the potential energy is negative as the ions come closer together, the energy becomes less negative as the distance between the ions increases but the 1/r dependence shows that ions interact even at quite long distances compared with the size of the ions

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28
Q

Non covalent interactions?

A

Interactions that occur between molecules the have no overall charge are known as non covalent interactions to distinguish them from covalent bonds with molecules they are also sometimes known as van der waals interactions

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29
Q

Dipole dipole interactions?

A

Two molecules that have dipoles can interact, the larger the dipole moment the stronger the interaction, the potential energy of interaction varies depending on the relative orientation of the molecules

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30
Q

Dipole dipole interactions 1/r^6 dependence?

A

The 1/r^6 dependence means that the potential energy approaches zero very quickly at the molecules get further away so that the intentions are only significant when the molecules are very close together.

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31
Q

Dipole dipole interactions 1/T dependence?

A

The 1/T dependence means that the magnitude of the interaction energy is smaller at higher temperatures this is because at higher temperatures the molecules have more thermal energy which leads to a more random orientation of the dipole

32
Q

Dipole induced dipole interactions?

A

When a molecules with a dipole approaches a molecules without one it induces a movement of the electrons causing a temporary dipole in the non polar molecules so there is an attractive interaction

33
Q

Strength of dipole induced dipole interactions?

A

Depends on how easily the electron cloud of the non polar molecule can be moved around, this is measured by the polarisability of the molecule, the higher the polarisability the more easily the electrons can be distorted by a nearby dipole or charge

34
Q

Induced dipole induced dipole interactions?

A

Non polar molecules have attractive interactions due to the formation of instantaneous induced dipoles, these are known as dispersion or london interactions a theoretical model for dispersion forces showed that the strength of the interaction depends on how easily the electrons in the molecules can be distorted and hence on their polarisability as well as their ionisation energy

35
Q

Induced dipole induced dipole interactions compared to dipole dipole interactions?

A

While the magnitude of dispersion energies are much smaller than those of chemical bonds they are comparable with and usually slightly larger than dipole dipole interactions, they are usually the major contribution to intermolecular interactions

36
Q

Overall attractive interaction?

A

Sum of those given by previous interactions, all of the contributions to the attractive interactions depend on separation as 1/r^6 this means that they are short range and their magnitudes rapidly decreases as the separation increases, they become very small once the separation is more than a few molecular diameters, at constant temperature all then terms except r^6 are constant for a particular compound

37
Q

Hydrogen bonding?

A

Attractive intermolecular interaction, interaction between a hydrogen atom and an electronegative tom, they are intermediate between ionic and non covalent interactions

38
Q

Repulsive interactions?

A

The electron clouds of two adjacent molecules repel each other, the repulsive force is small until the molecules approach close to each other, at very small separation the repulsive interaction energy rise rapidly as the molecules move closer together

39
Q

value fo potential energy for repulsive interactions?

A

The value of the potential energy is positive indicating that it is a repulsive interaction, it varies as 1/r^12 which means that it is significant one when the molecules are very close together

40
Q

Total interaction?

A

For two molecules the overall interaction energy is the sum of the attractive and repulsive contributions given by the Lennard Jones potential

41
Q

Interaction at large separations?

A

At large separations there is no interaction between the molecule as they approach they begin to attract each other and the potential energy falls when the molecules come bear close the repulsive interactions becomes dominant and the potential energy corresponds to the equivalence separation

42
Q

Minimum potential energy?

A

Corresponds to the equilibrium separation between the molecules r0, at this minimum the total potential energy is equal to -E where E is the energy needed to overcome the attractive interactions and completely separate the molecules, the larger the value of E the stronger the interactions between the molecules, the distance r0 is the equilibrium separation where the net force between the molecules is zero

43
Q

Vapour phase?

A

There can only be one vapour phase no mater how many gases are present since gases mix in all proportions

44
Q

Solid phases?

A

Mixtures of two solids can like single components display any number of solid phases, the major difference is that where pure substance only have one liquid oases mixtures can have more than one

45
Q

The phase rule?

A

simple rule that helps interpret phase diagrams

46
Q

Degree of freedom?

A

The number in intensive variable such as temperature and pressure that can be varied independently without changing the number of phases in equilibrium

47
Q

When is mixing spontaneous?

A

mixing is spontaneous if it results in a lowering of the Gibbs energy of the system, the change in Gibbs energy is the difference between the molar Gibbs energy of the solution and that of the separate components

48
Q

What is he composition of a mixture represented by?

A

The mole fraction of each component Xa and Xb

49
Q

Value of delta mixS?

A

Usually positive since the mixture will be more disordered and will have a higher entropy than the separate components, the entropy change favours mixing whether two liquids actually mix depends on the enthalpy change of mixing

50
Q

What does the enthalpy change of mixing arise from?

A

Differences in the intermolecular interactions between molecules in each of the pure liquids and between the components in solution

51
Q

If delta mix H is positive?

A

Means an unfavourable contribution to delta mix G, if delta mix H is large and positive then its magnitude may be greater than that of

  • T delta mixS, in this case delta mix G will be positive so the separate components will be thermodynamically more stable than the mixture, they do not mix spontaneously, however if the value of delta mix H is small and positive mixing may occur of the magnitude of delta mix h is less than that of
  • T delta mixS
52
Q

Why does delta mix G change with temperature?

A

Since the T delta mixS term becomes more significant at higher temperatures, two liquids that do not mix at low temperatures may mix on heating

53
Q

If -T delta mixS is negative and enthalpy change of mixing is negative what are the interactions, Gibbs energy change of mixing and the overall effect?

A

A-B stronger than A-A and B-B, enthalpy change of mixing is negative, Gibbs energy change of mixing is negative and of large magnitude and the overall effect is that the components mix

54
Q

If -T delta mixS is negative and enthalpy change of mixing is positive and large what are the interactions, Gibbs energy change of mixing and the overall effect?

A

A-B much weaker than A-A and B-B, enthalpy change of mixing is positive and large, Gibbs energy change of mixing is positive and large, components do not mix but may do so at high temperatures

55
Q

If -T delta mixS is negative and enthalpy change of mixing is positive and small what are the interactions, Gibbs energy change of mixing and the overall effect?

A

A-B much weaker than A-A and B-B, enthalpy change of mixing is positive and small, Gibbs energy change of mixing is negative and small, components may mix but depends on temperature and composition

56
Q

Phase behaviour of solutions?

A

Can be more complicated than this since the enthalpy change depend son the relative amounts of components involved it can be small for some composition but high for other, hence some compounds mix in some compositions but not other they are said to be partially miscible also the enthalpy change can be temperature dependent

57
Q

Dissolving spontaneous?

A

For dissolving to be spontaneous the overall Gibbs energy change must be negative and this can be split into the contribution form the enthalpy change even but he difference in interaction between molecules in the solution and those in the solid and pure liquid and the entropy change related to the change in order of the molecules

58
Q

Value of delta mix S?

A

Most solutions are more disordered than the separate solid and liquid so that the value of delta mix S is positive and favours dissolving

59
Q

Dissolving a non polar solid in a non polar solvent?

A

Interactions between each of the components will be relatively weaker will be similar in solution and in the separate components so the magnitude of enthalpy change of mixing will be small this means that the entropy change will be the most important contribution to the Gibbs energy change so the value of Gibbs energy change of mixing will be negative and the substance will dissolve. A similar situation occurs with a polar or ionic substance dissolving in a polar solvent the difference in interactions and hence the magnitudes of enthalpy change of mixing will be small so that dissolving will be favoured

60
Q

Dissolving a polar or ionic solid in a non polar solvent or a non polar solid in a polar solvent?

A

The solute solvent interactions will be relatively weak in the solution and will not overcome the stronger interactions in the solid, the value of enthalpy of mixing will be positive and may lead to overall positive Gibbs energy change so that the solid does not dissolve

61
Q

Vapour pressure of a liquid?

A

Related to the intermolecular forces in the liquid, if the molecules strongly attract each other few molecules escape the liquid to enter the vapour phase so the liquid exerts a low vapour pressure

62
Q

Raoult’s law?

A

For many solutions the vapour pressure of each component p wad proportional to its mole fraction X, for a solution with two component A and B
pA = Xap0A pB = Xbp0B
Ptotal = Pa + Pb = XaP0A + XbP0B
where p0 is the vapour pressure of the pure component at the temperature of the solution

63
Q

Obey Raoult’s law?

A

In practise vary few solutions obey Raoult’s law precisely and it can only be regarded as an approximation, however it works quite well for mixtures of similar compounds such as hexane and hepatic or benzene and methylene, mixtures that obey Raoult’s law are known as ideal solutions

64
Q

Requirements for a solution to behave ideally?

A

The solution should consist of molecules that:
Are similar in chemical nature so that they have similar intermolecular interactions
Are similar in size and shape

65
Q

Why are the molecules being of similar chemical nature more important than size and shape?

A

Difference in size and shape of the compounds are only significant of the difference is large such as in a solution of a polymer in a solvent, the major requirement for an ideal solution is that the intermolecular interactions in the solution are similar to those in pure compounds

66
Q

Intermolecular interactions in an ideal solution?

A

In an ideal solution the intermolecular forces in the solution are the same as in the pure components so the enthalpy change of mixing is zero, and the value of Gibbs energy change of mixing is negative

67
Q

Ideal solutions?

A

Few solutions behave ideally, it is looking at deviations from ideal solutions behaviour where the model is useful because these deviations provide information about the interactions that occur between molecules in the solution

68
Q

How can the behaviour of real solutions be described?

A

By modifying Raoults law and introducing an additional parameter, the activity coefficient
Pa(real) = yAXaP0A

69
Q

Activity coefficient for an ideal gas?

A

1
If Y > 1 the vapour pressure of the component over the solution is higher than it would be if the solution behaved ideally. If y < 1 the vapour pressure is lower than for an ideal solution

70
Q

Positive deviations from Raoult’s law?

A

In most solutions the interactions in solution are weaker than those in pure liquids in this case molecules are held less tightly into the solution and can more readily escape into the vapour, as a result the vapour pressure is greater than would be the case if the solution conformed to ideal behaviour, such systems are said to display positive deviations from Raoult’s law since p > p(ideal) so that y > 1 the higher the value of y the greater the difference in intermolecular interaction between the solution and pure liquid

71
Q

Negative deviations from Raoult’s law?

A

If the components show stronger intermolaulcar interactions in solution that in pure liquids so that few molecules escape to the vapour, as a result the vapour pressure is smaller than would be the case if the solution confirmed to ideal behaviour so p < p (ideal) and y < 1 such systems are said to display negative deviations from Raoult’s law

72
Q

When does Raoult’s law work best?

A

When the component is present in excess, ie the solvent in a dilute solution. As Xa gets closer to 1 each A molecule is more likely to be surrounded by other A molecules and experience an environment similar to that in the pure liquid

73
Q

How is Raoult’s law a limiting law?

A

It works better as the concentration of one component approaches 100% it desired the behaviour of the solvent in a volute solution quite well but does not usually describe the behaviour of the solute well. The solute molecules B are in a minority so they are in an environment quite unlike that of pure B, this means Raoult’s law does not describe the vapour pressure of B at all well, this is particularly the case for gases dissolved in liquids

74
Q

What rule does the vapour pressure of the solute B follow?

A

Henry’s law
pB = XbKb
solutions that behave according to Henrys law are called ideal dilute solutions, henrys law is also a limiting law and solutions obey it better as the solution becomes more dilute

75
Q

Consequence of Henry’s law?

A

For a given mass of solvent the amount of gas dissolved is proportional to the partial pressure of the gas over the solution, the solubility of the gas rises as the pressure increases, when the pressure is released the solubility falls and the gas rapidly comes out of solution