Unit 3 (IMFs & Properties): How Chemists Understand, Represent, Separate, and Predict Solutions

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25 Terms

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Mixture

A physical combination of substances in which each component retains its own chemical identity; properties depend on how particles are combined and interact.

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Homogeneous Mixture

A mixture with uniform composition throughout; any small sample has the same proportions of components.

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Heterogeneous Mixture

A mixture with non-uniform composition; different regions contain different proportions of components.

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Solution

A homogeneous mixture at the particle level in which solute particles are evenly dispersed among solvent particles so regions of different composition cannot be distinguished.

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Solute

The substance being dissolved in a solution.

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Solvent

The substance that does the dissolving and forms the continuous phase of a solution (often present in greater amount).

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Suspension

A heterogeneous mixture with large particles that settle out over time; often separable by filtration.

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Colloid

A heterogeneous mixture with intermediate-sized particles that do not settle out easily; not a “true solution.”

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Tyndall Effect

Light scattering by particles in a colloid, used as an observable test to distinguish colloids from true solutions.

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Intermolecular Forces (IMFs)

Attractive forces between particles (e.g., dispersion, dipole-dipole, hydrogen bonding) that strongly influence dissolving and solution behavior.

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Like Dissolves Like

Guideline that substances with similar polarity and IMF types tend to be soluble/miscible because new solute–solvent attractions can compensate for attractions broken during dissolving.

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Dissociation vs. Ionization

Dissociation: separation of pre-existing ions from an ionic solid in solution (e.g., NaCl → Na⁺ + Cl⁻). Ionization: formation of ions from neutral molecules in water (common for weak acids/bases).

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Hydration

Solvation specifically by water: water molecules surround dissolved particles/ions; in ion hydration, water’s O end points toward cations and H ends toward anions (ion–dipole attraction).

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Electrolyte

A substance that produces ions in solution, allowing the solution to conduct electricity due to mobile charged particles.

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Strong vs. Weak Electrolytes

Strong electrolytes produce many ions in solution (e.g., strong acids, many soluble ionic compounds). Weak electrolytes partially ionize, producing fewer ions and weaker conductivity.

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Nonelectrolyte

A substance that dissolves as neutral molecules (does not form ions) and therefore conducts electricity poorly (e.g., sucrose in water).

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Molarity (M)

A concentration unit defined as moles of solute per liter of solution: M = n/V (with V in liters).

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Chromatography

A family of separation techniques that separates mixture components based on different attractions to a stationary phase and a mobile phase (IMFs in action).

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Stationary Phase vs. Mobile Phase

Stationary phase: the fixed surface (often polar paper/cellulose or silica). Mobile phase: the solvent that moves through/along the stationary phase and carries solutes by repeated dissolving/adsorbing.

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Retention Factor (Rf)

In TLC/paper chromatography, the ratio Rf = dsolute/dsolvent (distance spot moved divided by distance solvent front moved); unitless and condition-dependent.

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Solubility

The maximum amount of solute that can dissolve in a given amount of solvent under specified conditions (typically temperature; pressure also matters for gases).

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Saturated Solution

A solution containing the maximum dissolved solute at equilibrium; dissolving and crystallizing occur at equal rates (dynamic equilibrium).

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Unsaturated Solution

A solution containing less than the maximum amount of solute at that temperature; additional solute can still dissolve.

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Supersaturated Solution

A metastable solution containing more dissolved solute than the equilibrium maximum; easily crystallizes if disturbed or seeded.

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Henry’s Law

For gases dissolving in liquids at constant temperature, solubility is proportional to the gas’s partial pressure above the solution: S = k_H P.

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