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Chapter 20 The Dissolving Process Part 2
29

Chapter 20

Jan 14, 2016

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Chapter 20. The Dissolving Process Part 2. Rate of Solution. The rate at which a material dissolves can be affected by: Surface area. Rate of Solution. The rate at which a material dissolves can be affected by: 2.Agitation (stirring). Rate of Solution. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Chapter 20

Chapter 20

The Dissolving Process

Part 2

Page 2: Chapter 20

Rate of Solution

The rate at which a material dissolves can be affected by:

1. Surface area

Page 3: Chapter 20

Rate of Solution

The rate at which a material dissolves can be affected by:

2. Agitation (stirring)

Page 4: Chapter 20

Rate of Solution

The rate at which a material dissolves can be affected by:

3. Temperature

• Temperature not only affects how quickly we can dissolve a solute but also how much solute can be dissolved.

Page 5: Chapter 20

Factors Affecting SolubilityFactors Affecting SolubilityTemperature EffectsTemperature Effects

Page 6: Chapter 20

Temperature and Solubility of Solids

Temperature Solubility (g/100 g H2O)

KCl(s) NaNO3(s)

0° 27.6 74

20°C 34.0 88

50°C 42.6 114

100°C 57.6 182

Page 7: Chapter 20

Temperature and Solubility of Solids

Temperature Solubility (g/100 g H2O)

KCl(s) NaNO3(s)

0° 27.6 74

20°C 34.0 88

50°C 42.6 114

100°C 57.6 182

The solubility of most solids increases with an increase in the temperature.

Page 8: Chapter 20

Temperature and solubility

Page 9: Chapter 20

Factors Affecting SolubilityFactors Affecting SolubilityTemperature EffectsTemperature Effects

Page 10: Chapter 20

Temperature and Solubility of Gases

Temperature Solubility (g/100 g H2O)

CO2(g) O2(g)

0°C 0.34 0.0070

20°C 0.17 0.0043

50°C 0.076 0.0026

Page 11: Chapter 20

Temperature and Solubility of Gases

Temperature Solubility (g/100 g H2O)

CO2(g) O2(g)

0°C 0.34 0.0070

20°C 0.17 0.0043

50°C 0.076 0.0026

The solubility of gases decreases with an increase in temperature.

Page 12: Chapter 20

Thermal Pollution

Page 13: Chapter 20

Thermal Pollution

• Thermal pollution can occur when heated water is discharged into cooler streams or rivers. This heated water can increase biological activities and result in the reduction in oxygen content of the water.

Page 14: Chapter 20

Unsaturated Solutions

• Contains less than the maximum amount of solute.

• No undissolved solute present.

• Can dissolve more solute.

Dissolved solute

Page 15: Chapter 20

Saturated Solutions

• Contains the maximum amount of solute that can dissolve.

• Tend to have undissolved solute at the bottom of the container.

• Solution is in equilibrium with undissolved solute.

Page 16: Chapter 20

What is the solubility of NaCl at room temperature (25°C)?

Solubility ≈ 36g NaCl/100g of water

Page 17: Chapter 20

How could I dissolve the extra 4.0g of NaCl without adding more water?

Page 18: Chapter 20

Heat up the water to ≈ 90°C

Solubility ≈ 40g NaCl/100g of water

If we would cool the water back to room temperature we may create a supersaturated solution.

Page 19: Chapter 20

Supersaturated• A supersaturated solution contains more than the maximum

amount of solute and is unstable. It returns to a saturated solution if disturbed in some way (i.e.: a seed crystal)

Page 20: Chapter 20

Pressure and Gas Solubility

• More gas can dissolve at higher pressure.

Page 21: Chapter 20

Nitrogen Narcosis

Page 22: Chapter 20

Nitrogen Narcosis

• This is a condition that can result from diving too deep, bringing on disorientation, euphoria, errors in judgment and even hallucinations or unconsciousness. Any of those can be fatal.

Page 23: Chapter 20

The Bends

Page 24: Chapter 20

The Bends• A sometimes fatal condition resulting from

the formation of nitrogen bubbles in the blood and tissues, because of too rapid ascent, seen especially in deep-sea divers ascending rapidly from a dive.

Page 25: Chapter 20

• August 21, 1986

• Lake Nyos – Cameroon,

Africa

• 1800 people, thousands of cattle, and many more birds and animals are found dead.

Page 26: Chapter 20
Page 27: Chapter 20

Lake Nyos

Page 28: Chapter 20
Page 29: Chapter 20

Homework

• Worksheet: The Dissolving Process