Chapter 11 Flashcards

(15 cards)

1
Q

electrostatic potential energy

A
  • E is proportional to (Q1Q2)/d
    • E is neg when Qs have opposite signs
      • so…E is neg for all salt
    • When ions are far apart, d is large and E is a small neg #
    • When ions are close together in a salt, d is small, Qs are large, and E is a large neg #
      • This means lower energy
      • energetically favorable
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2
Q

enthalpy of solution(deltaHsoln)

A
  • the overall energy change in enthalpy when an ionic solute is dissolved in a polar solvent
  • deltaHsoln=deltaHion-ion+deltaHdipole-dipole+deltaHion-dipole
    • overall change in enthalpy when an ionic solute is dissolved in a polar solvent
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3
Q

enthalpy of hydration

A
  • the energy change when gas-phase ions dissolve in a solvent
  • deltaHhydration=deltaHdipole-dipole+deltaHion-dipole
    • deltaHsoln=deltaHion-ion+deltaHhydration
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4
Q

lattice energy(U)

A
  • the enthalpy change that occurs when 1 mole of an ionic compound forms from its free ions in the gas phase
  • U=k(Q1Q2)/d
  • deltaHsoln=deltaHhydration - U
  • U is negative: it is heat released as a crystal is formed
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5
Q

Born-Haber cycle

A
  • a series of steps with corresponding enthalpy chanes that describes the formation of an ionic solid from its constituent elements
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6
Q

Vapor pressure of solutions

A
  • At a given temperature, the vapor pressure of the solvent in a solution containing nonvolatile solutes is less than the vapor pressure of the pure solvent.
  • When seawater and pure water are adjoined in a sealed container, the seawater side will increase in volume over time
    • pure water tranfers over b/c of dissolved solutes in seawater
  • As the water in both sections evaporates, the concentration of water vapor in the air space of the sealed chamber increases
    • as the concentration of water vapor increases, the pressure the water vapor exerts on the 2 liquid surfaces increases
    • At constant temp, this pressure stabilizes at a value equal to the vapor pressure of water at that temp
      • rate of evap=rate of condens
  • Pure water has a higher rate of evap b/c it moved over
    • but, condens rates are the same meaning pure water loser more water than it can restore over time
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7
Q

Raoult’s Law

A
  • Psoln=XsolventPosolvent
  • ideal solution: a solution that obeys Raoult’s law
    • solute and solvent experience similar intermolecular forces
      • most solns are ideal systems
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8
Q

fractional distillation

A
  • a method of separating a mixture of compounds based on their different boiling points
    • separates the volatile components of a mixture
      • based on observation that bp of a mixture changes as the mixture is distilled
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9
Q

colligative properties

A
  • characteristics of solutions that depend on the concentration and not the identity of particles dissolved in the solvent
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10
Q

molality(m)

A
  • concentration as mol of solute/kg of solvent
    • used to quantify colligative properties
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11
Q

Van’t Hoff Factor

A
  • Electrolytes dissociate, nonelectrolytes do not
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12
Q

ion pair

A
  • a cluster formed when a cation and an anion associate with each other in solution
    • more form when concentration increases
      *
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13
Q

Osmosis

A
  • the flow of a fluid through a semipermeable membrane to balance the concentration of solutes in solutions on the 2 sides of the membrane
    • flow goes from more dilute to more concentrated
    • semipermeable membrances allow particles of solvent to pass through, but not of solute
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14
Q

osmotic pressure

A
  • the pressure applied across a semipermeable membrane to stop the flow of solvent from less conc to higher conc(aka backwards)
    • osmotic pressure increases with solute conc(M) and solution temp(T)
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15
Q

reverse osmosis

A
  • a process in which solvent is forced through semipermeable membranes, leaving a more concentrated solution behind
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