Physical Science - Solutions and Solubility
- Solutions
- How solutions form?
- What is a solution?
-A homogenous mixture containing particles that cannot be seen, even with a microscope.
-Remember solutions can be solids, liquids, or gas
-Example:
- Salt Water is a solution made up of salt and water. However you cannot see the salt.
- Soda – carbon dioxide is dissolved in water and syrup
- Salt water demonstration
- What happens to the salt when it is added to the water?
- It dissolves
- A substance that causes something to dissolve is called a solvent
- The something that is being dissolved is called a solute
- So, a solvent is a substance that dissolves a solute
- Dissolving
-How does the process of dissolving work?
- Dissolving of a solid in a liquid occurs at the surface of the solid and continues until the solid is in solution
- Let’s use sugar as an example:
- When sugar is added to water the particles that make up water are moving and cluster around the sugar molecule.
- Why? Because both water and sugar are polar molecules so the oppositely charged ends of water and sugar are attracted to each other.
- The water molecules pull the sugar molecules into solution
- The moving water molecules spread the sugar molecules out equally throughout the solution
-Rate of dissolving
- Does everything dissolve at the same rate? NO
- Can you increase or decrease the rate of dissolving? YES!!!
- How?
- Sugar Cube Demonstration
- Three ways to increase the rate of dissolving
- Stir it – bring more fresh solvent in contact with the solute
- Heat it – speed up the movement of the particles increase the rate and speed of contact between the particles
- Grind it up or reduce surface area/volume – This increases the surface area in which the solvent can act upon the solute
- Gases and Stirring:
- How do you think these same factors will affect a gas-liquid solution?
- What happens when you shake or stir a soda?
- The soda spills all over the place because the gas is coming out of the liquid.
- Will the gas come out of the soda if you do not shake or stir the soda?
- Yes, however not as fast
- Conclusion: Stirring and shaking a liquid-gas solution will increase the rate that gas will escape.
- Temperature and Pressure:
- Question: How might you cause the gas to dissolve faster in a liquid?
- Think about a soda, when you open a cold bottle and a warm bottle of soda which one makes a louder noise?
- The warm one, why?
- Gas is more soluble in colder temperatures so it will stay in solution longer than warmer temperatures.
- Remember Charles’ Law, if you increase the temperature you increase the volume. The warmer the temperature the more active the molecules the more likely the gas will exit the solution.