Chemistry 1302A/B Chapter Notes - Chapter 1.2: Ionic Compound, Alkali Metal, Solubility Equilibrium

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Chapter 1: Chemical Equilibrium
Topic 1.2: Solubility of Ionic Compounds
A Brief Review of Solubility and Precipitation
The solubility of a substance is the amount of that substance that will dissolve in a certain
volume of a specific solvent, and is usually expressed in grams per litre or in moles per
litre
Soluble compound: 10g or more can dissolve in a litre of solvent
Slightly soluble compound: 0.1 to 10g can dissolve in a litre of solvent
Insoluble compound: less than 0.1g can dissolve in a litre of solvent
Ionic compounds become more soluble as the temperature increases
Solubility Guidelines for Ionic Solids
Solubility Guidelines for Ionic Solids
Soluble Ions
Exceptions
Nitrates (NO3-)
None
All alkali metal ions
None
All salts of NH4+
None
Halides (Cl-, Br-, I-)
Except Ag+, Hg2+, Cu+, Pb2+
Sulfates (SO42-)
Except Ca2+, Sr2+, Ba2+, Pb2+
Insoluble Ions
Exceptions
Sulfides (S2-)
Except Group 1, 2, ions and NH4+
Carbonates (CO32-)
Except Group 1 ions and NH4+
Phosphates (PO43-)
Except Group 1 ions and NH4+
Hydroxides (OH-)
Except Group 1 ions and NH4+N, Ba2+
The Solubility Product
A solvent is a liquid or a gas that dissolves another solid, liquid or gas
The substances that dissolve in a solvent are called the solutes of the resultant solution
Solubility is defined as the amount of a given substance that dissolves in a given volume
of solvent at a given temperature, and may be expressed in g L-1 or mol L-1
When an ionic solid dissolves in water, it dissociates into hydrated (solvated) ions
When the maximum amount of solid has dissolved, the resultant solution is said to be
“saturated”
If solid is still present when the solution is saturated, the system is at equilibrium
Salts that are very soluble have a very large Ksp value; these dissolutions essentially go to
completion and are denoted by a one way arrow (
)
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Document Summary

Soluble compound: 10g or more can dissolve in a litre of solvent. Slightly soluble compound: 0. 1 to 10g can dissolve in a litre of solvent. Insoluble compound: less than 0. 1g can dissolve in a litre of solvent: ionic compounds become more soluble as the temperature increases. ) is used: in general, for the dissolution of an ionic solid of composition axby, the equilibrium reaction is written as: Ax by( s ) xa y+ (aq ) + yb x (aq : the ksp is an equilibrium constant called the solubility product or the solubility product constant; the ksp expression for this heterogeneous equilibrium is written as: The reaction quotient, q: suppose on dissolves the compound a2b to produce a saturated solution: 2 ( s ) 2 a + + b2 . B: the ksp expression may be used for the system at equilibrium. The reaction quotient, q, also known as the ion product, would be written:

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