CHEM 230 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Supersaturation, Gibbs Free Energy, Mole Fraction

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21 Dec 2016
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This is an example of a gas coming out of a liquid. If you open up the bottle, the sound you hear is the sound of some of the pressure leaving the bottle. You put an overpressure over the soda to keep more co2 dissolved in the soda. If you let the bottle sit there, the soda becomes flat which means the co2 came out of the liquid. Because increasing pressure increases the rate at which gas molecules contact a solvent surface. Each gas a different relationship for the slope between pressure and solubility. The answer is if you take gaseous molecules and put them into water, the two different particles interact and make new imfs. When you make imfs, this gives off energy. So gases are more soluble at higher pressures and lower temperatures. Metals will form cations (always give up electrons) If there is a metal, it is a salt.

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