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ChemistryPC

Solutions & Colligative Properties

Apply concepts from Solutions & Colligative Properties to problem-solving. Focus on numerical practice and real-world applications.

2-3 Qs/year50 minPhase 2 · APPLICATION

Concept Core

Solutions are homogeneous mixtures, and their behaviour underlies many NEET numericals. Henry's law governs gas solubility: p = KHK_{H} × x, where p is the partial pressure of the gas and x is its mole fraction in solution. KHK_{H} increases with temperature (gases become less soluble in hot water). Applications: carbonated beverages release CO₂ when opened (pressure drops), and deep-sea divers face "the bends" when dissolved N₂ forms bubbles during rapid ascent.

Raoult's law for volatile liquid mixtures: PAP_{A} = xAx_{A} · P°_A and PtotalP_{total} = xAx_{A} · P°_A + xBx_{B} · P°_B.
For a non-volatile solute in a volatile solvent: P = xsolventx_{solvent} · P°_solvent.

Ideal solutions obey Raoult's law at all compositions (ΔHmixH_{mix} = 0, ΔVmixV_{mix} = 0); examples: benzene + toluene, n-hexane + n-heptane. Non-ideal solutions deviate:

  • Positive deviation: PobservedP_{observed} > PRaoultP_{Raoult} (weaker A-B interactions, ΔHmixH_{mix} > 0, ΔVmixV_{mix} > 0) → form minimum boiling azeotropes. Examples: ethanol + water (SMILES: CCO + O), acetone + CS₂.
  • Negative deviation: PobservedP_{observed} < PRaoultP_{Raoult} (stronger A-B interactions, ΔHmixH_{mix} < 0, ΔVmixV_{mix} < 0) → form maximum boiling azeotropes.
    Examples: chloroform + acetone (SMILES: ClC(Cl)Cl + CC(=O)C), HCl + water.

Colligative properties depend on the NUMBER of solute particles, not their identity:

  1. Relative lowering of vapour pressure: ΔP/P° = xsolutex_{solute}
  2. Elevation of boiling point: ΔTb = Kb · m (water Kb = 0.52 K·kg/mol)
  3. Depression of freezing point: ΔTf = Kf · m (water Kf = 1.86 K·kg/mol)
  4. Osmotic pressure: π = CRT (C in mol/L, R = 0.0821 L·atm/(mol·K))

Molar mass determination: M₂ = (Kb × w₂ × 1000) / (ΔTb × w₁)

Solved Example 1: 18 g glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆, M = 180 g/mol) in 500 g water. Find boiling point. Molality = (18180\frac{18}{180}) / (5001000\frac{500}{1000}) = 0.10\frac{1}{0}.5 = 0.2 m ΔTb = Kb × m = 0.52 × 0.2 = 0.104 K Boiling point = 100.104°C

Solved Example 2: Osmotic pressure of 0.1 M NaCl at 27°C (i = 1.85). π = iCRT = 1.85 × 0.1 × 0.0821 × 300 Dimensional analysis: (unitless) × (mol/L) × L·atm/(mol·K) × K = atm ✓ π = 4.56 atm

Solved Example 3: ΔTf of 0.1 m acetic acid in benzene = 0.256 K (Kf = 5.12 K·kg/mol). Find van't Hoff factor and degree of association. Expected ΔTf = 5.12 × 0.1 = 0.512 K i = observed/expected = 0.2560\frac{256}{0}.512 = 0.5 For dimerization (n=2): Derivation: If α = degree of association, initial moles = 1, after association moles = (1 − α) + α/2 = 1 − α/2. So i = 1 − α/2. 0.5 = 1 − α/2 → α/2 = 0.5 → α = 1 (100% association)

Van't Hoff factor i = observed colligative property / calculated colligative property.

  • Dissociation (i > 1): i = 1 + (n−1)α, where n = number of ions. NaCl: n=2, i ≈ 2.
  • Association (i < 1): i = 1 + (1/n − 1)α, where n = number of monomers per aggregate.

Reverse osmosis applies pressure exceeding osmotic pressure to force solvent through a semipermeable membrane (water purification).

The key testable concept is colligative property calculations with the van't Hoff factor for electrolyte and association systems.

Key Testable Concept

The key testable concept is **colligative property calculations with the van't Hoff factor for electrolyte and association systems**.

Comparison Tables

A) Colligative Properties

PropertyFormulaConstantValue for WaterMeasurement
Relative lowering of VPΔP/P° = xsolutex_{solute}Manometer
Boiling point elevationΔTb = iKbmKb (ebullioscopic)0.52 K·kg/molBeckmann thermometer
Freezing point depressionΔTf = iKfmKf (cryoscopic)1.86 K·kg/molBeckmann thermometer
Osmotic pressureπ = iCRTR0.0821 L·atm/(mol·K)Osmometer

B) Ideal vs Non-Ideal Solutions

FeatureIdealPositive DeviationNegative Deviation
Raoult's lawObeyedPobsP_{obs} > PRaoultP_{Raoult}PobsP_{obs} < PRaoultP_{Raoult}
A-B interactionsSame as A-A and B-BWeaker than A-A, B-BStronger than A-A, B-B
ΔHmixH_{mix}0> 0 (endothermic)< 0 (exothermic)
ΔVmixV_{mix}0> 0 (expansion)< 0 (contraction)
Azeotrope typeNoneMinimum boilingMaximum boiling
ExamplesBenzene + tolueneEthanol + waterCHCl₃ + acetone

C) Van't Hoff Factor

SoluteTypen (ions/mers)i (theoretical)Example
Glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆)Non-electrolyte11No dissociation/association
NaClDissociation2 ions2Na⁺ + Cl⁻
K₂SO₄Dissociation3 ions32K⁺ + SO₄²⁻
AlCl₃Dissociation4 ions4Al³⁺ + 3Cl⁻
Acetic acid in benzeneAssociation (dimer)2 monomers0.52CH₃COOH → (CH₃COOH)₂
Benzoic acid in benzeneAssociation (dimer)2 monomers0.52C₆H₅COOH → (C₆H₅COOH)₂

D) Common Kb and Kf Values

SolventKb (K·kg/mol)Kf (K·kg/mol)
Water0.521.86
Benzene2.535.12
Acetic acid3.073.90
Chloroform3.634.68
Camphor5.9540.0

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