CHM 113 Lecture Notes - Solubility, Spectator Ion, Ionic Compound

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6 Dec 2012
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Precipitation reaction: replacement reacting in which a solid precipitate is formed in a solution. Dissociation: break up of soluble ionic compounds into ions in solution: solubility: the ability of a substance (the solute) to dissolve in the solvent. Solubility rules tell us which compounds are soluble: appendix j of lab manual & pg 121 of textbook. Electrolyte: solution of ions that conducts and electric current: strength depends on how many ions are formed in the solution. Strong electrolytes: nearly 100% dissociation (many ions) More ions=stronger electrolyte solution: al(no3)3 > nacl, al(no3)3 has 4 ions, nacl has 2 ions. Examples: any soluble ionic compound in h2o. Weak electrolytes: only some dissociation (few ions) What happens when pb(no3) (aq) and nai (aq) are mixed together in a solution: determine the ions that form when mixed together. Nano3: write and balance equations as if both possible products form. 2nai+ pb(no3) 2nano3+pbi2: check if insoluble or not using solubility rules.

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