CHEM 1410 Lecture Notes - Lecture 33: Solvent, Phospholipid, Strong Electrolyte

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Homogenous mixtures: dissolving a solute in a solvent, the same concentration everywhere. Solvent: liquid, more solvent: imf in the solute must be broken (ignore if solute is a gas, imf in the solvent must be broken. There is now an empty space in the solvent that is ready to be filled by the solute. 1 and 2 are both uphill reactions, energetically unfavorable, low to high e: imf between solute and solvent are formed. The balance of energies determines whether the solute will dissolve: If the solvent and solute have similar imf in their pure forms they will probably mix well. Polar solvent (e. g. h2o) will dissolve polar/ionic solutes. Surfactant: tends to be at the surface of the water, makes good soaps. Example: phospholipid bilayer, hydrophilic/polar heads go beneath surface, hydrophobic/nonpolar tails remain above. Scenario 1: dissolve nacl in h2o: break ionic bonds (solute interactions, break h-bonds in h2o (solvent interactions, form ion-dipole interactions (extremely attractive)

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