07 Mixtures and Solutions 2009
07 Mixtures and Solutions 2009
07 Mixtures and Solutions 2009
SYSTEMS
When something is too complex to understand, we divide it in different parts and study
them individually. Any part of the Universe on which we focus our attention to study
from a scientific point of view is called a system. When we study how a system is
formed and “peep” inside it deeper and deeper we are analysing the system.
Analysing systems we find that sometimes they are very simple and others they are
quite complex and require further divisions. The hydrosphere is a system (quite a
complex one). To study it, maybe some scientists (ecologists) will study the relations
among the different communities. But some others will just study in detail the
behaviour of one species in the ecosystem. Chemists will centre their attention just on
the sea water trying to find its composition
From a chemical point of view, any system is made of particles. If all the particles in a
system are equal, we call it a pure substance. Being all the particles the same, a pure
substance has very definite characteristics or (as it has been studied in 1st year)
intensive properties (density, melting point, colour, etc.).
If particles in a system are not all equal, then the system is called a mixture. Mixtures
do not show always the same properties because these will depend on the proportion in
which the different particles are found in it. A mixture generally shows some properties
of each of the components.
How many pure substances can be “picked” out from the mixture to the right side of
paper? Can you find any elements in it?
The differences between pure substances and mixtures are shown in the chart below:
Just about everything that you can think of is probably a mixture. Even the purest of
materials still contain other substances as impurities.
Although it is almost physically impossible to isolate absolutely pure substances, a
substance is said to be pure if no impurities can be detected using the best available
techniques.
Last year, you have studied what the properties of a material are: colour, hardness,
density, melting and boiling points, mass, weight, volume.
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Intensive Properties
Intensive properties are those properties such as density, boiling point, melting point
etc. that do not depend on the amount of substance considered. Weight, volume, mass,
are not intensive but extensive properties. In this course we will be interested in the
intensive properties of systems.
Phase
A phase is any observable part of a material or system that has its own set of
intensive properties. A mixture of sand and sodium chloride has two phases, one of
them having the properties of salt, the other one those of sand. In a chocolate chip
cookie the dough and the chips have different properties. A spoonful of salt stirred in
water forms just one phase because we cannot see regions with different properties.
Heterogeneous Systems
These are made up of more than one phase that can be separated mechanically.
Homogeneous Systems
Component
Some systems seem to be homogeneous to the naked eye but show as heterogeneous
when seen through a microscope. Milk and mayonnaise belong to this class of systems.
As probably you have forgotten what was taught in 7th grade it will be necessary to
revise the methods used to separate the phases of a system. These separations will lead
to (pure) substances or to solutions (both homogeneous systems). Further work will
allow us to purify the substances and fractionate the solutions into components to be
purified later.
COARSE MIXTURES
In the case of a coarse mixture (stones and water) you can just
pick up the pieces of the solid with tongs or pour the liquid out.
In the case of two liquid layers, you can suck out one of the
layers or drain it through a tap in a special apparatus called
separatory funnel (see below). In the “Granola” to the right you
can see and separate most of its components using tweezers (or
your fingers)
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DISPERSE SYSTEMS
We will name the methods used to separate mixtures of the first two cases
SEPARATING SUSPENSIONS
Centrifuging is also very frequently used for this purpose: the figure to the
right shows a laboratory centrifuge. In biological chemistry this is the
method that is regularly used.
SEPARATING EMULSIONS
Destroying mists and smokes is usually not a problem you will find in the lab, but have
enormous relevance in industrial pollution control. Electric fields are used to make them
collapse in the factories’ chimneys to avoid damaging of the atmosphere.
The general method to be applied in these cases is differential dissolution also called
extraction. It consists in adding to the mixture an appropriate solvent that will
dissolve one of the solids but not the other. This will change the two solids problem
into a liquid solid problem: filtration will then be adequate. That’s how you can cope
with the problem of separating salt from sugar: add some ethanol (spirits) and sugar will
dissolve. Now filter to separate the salt that remains as a residue and recover sugar from
the solution.
Other methods are of limited interest but have many industrial applications (magnetic
separation, sieving, levigation, sublimation, etc.).
HOMOGENEOUS SYSTEMS
Homogeneous systems can be either pure substances or solutions. Solutions are those
homogeneous systems that can be separated by adequate methods into more than one
pure substance. The act of separating the solution into its components is called
fractionation. Fractionating a solution will result in two or more different pure (or
relatively pure) substances.
Solutions can be liquid, solid or gaseous.
Air is a gaseous solution: nitrogen, oxygen, argon, water vapour and carbon dioxide
are mixed but the system is homogeneous. We can fractionate air into its components
and in fact this is the way we gat to these gases as pure substances for industrial,
scientific or medical uses.
Alloys are solid solutions. We prepare alloys melting a metal and mixing it with other
elements (another metal, carbon, phosphorus, etc.). Once the melt is homogeneous it is
allowed to cool down and solidify. Steels (iron with some carbon and different metals
added) are prepared this way. Bronze is made out of copper dissolving some tin and
maybe other metals in it in a similar fashion.
Liquid solutions are frequently used and prepared. Sea water is a liquid solution. So are
whisky and plasma. When “Tang” is prepared, the sugar, the colorant, the preserving
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and the flavouring agents dissolve in water; but there is an additive in the mixture that
doesn’t dissolve! Tang in fact is turbid, it is a solution but also it is a suspension. (By
the way this substance is added on purpose to make it look like real orange juice that is
not totally transparent). People frequently call solution what in fact is a suspension
The importance of solutions stands on the fact that many chemical processes occur only
(or go better and faster) in solution. On the other hand, manipulating solutions is much
easier than working with solids.
Dissolving is a physical change: it will leave both the solute’s particles and the solvent’s
particles unchanged. The figure shows a blue solid’s particles (a solute) as they are
captured and dispersed among the red ones (a solvent). In a solution the solvent’s
particles are just surrounding the solute’s particles and separating them. This process is
called solvation (hydration in the case of water as solvent). As we cannot see an
individual particle but clusters of millions of particles the solute is not seen but
nevertheless it is still there.
CONCENTRATION OF A SOLUTION
The composition of a mixture can be stated in different ways. The amount of solute
dissolved in a given mass or volume of either solvent or total solution is called its
concentration. Concentration can be stated in different forms. We frequently state the
concentration of a solution referred to 100 g of solvent or 100 g of solution.
Percentage volume to volume (v / v): cm3 of a liquid solute (alcohol for instance)
dissolved in 100 cm3 of solution.
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Grams of solute in 100 cm3 of solvent: this is used mainly for solubility data.
Grams per litre (g /dm3): grams of solute dissolved in one litre of solution
Concentrated solutions are usually stocked in the lab or in a chemical factory, and they
are diluted just before they are used. This is the kind of thing people do everyday with
consumer products like fruit juice. Some concentrated solutions are used as "stock"
solutions. Dilute solutions are typically used but the concentrated solutions require less
storage space.
SOLUBILITY
In some cases (as water and alcohol) you can add more and more solute (alcohol) and it
will always dissolve. What happens in this cases is that the solute becomes the solvent
and vice versa. In this example the water molecules that originally surrounded the
alcohol particles are now in a lesser proportion and they are in turn surrounded by the
alcohol molecules! We call these two liquids MISCIBLE LIQUIDS.
But this is not the general case. A definite amount of a solvent can usually dissolve a
definite amount of a solute if we consider no changes in temperature.
The conventional reference for solubility is the number of grams of solute that can
dissolve in 100 cm3 of solvent. This value is the amount of solute that will dissolve and
form a saturated solution at the temperature listed. The solvent cannot dissolve more
solute at that temperature.
SOLUBILITY CURVES
The solubility of any solute changes if the temperature is increased. As a general rule,
all gases are less soluble and all solids are more soluble as temperature increases There
are exceptions for the solids rule such as Ce2(SO4)3 (look at the graph below)
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Solubility data are usually presented in a solubility chart or as solubility curves that
show graphically how the solubility of a substance changes with temperature
A saturated KCl solution at 10oC will have 31 grams of KCl dissolved in 100 grams of
water. If we add 40 grams of KCl to 100g of water in a flask 31 g of it will “disappear”
(dissolve) and there will be 9 grams of undissolved KCl remaining as a solid.
Raising the temperature of the mixture to 30oC will increase the amount of dissolved
KCl to 37 grams and there will be only 3 grams of solid undissolved. The entire 40
grams can be dissolved if the temperature is raised above 40oC.
Cooling the hot 40oC solution will reverse the process. When the temperature decreased
to 20oC the solubility will eventually be decreased to 34 gram KCl. There is a time
delay before the extra 6 grams of dissolved KCl crystallizes. This solution is
"supersaturated" and is a temporary condition. The "extra" solute will crystallise out
of solution when the randomly moving solute particles can form the crystal pattern of
the solid. A "seed" crystal is sometimes needed to provide the surface for solute
particles to crystallize on and establish equilibrium.
FRACTIONATING A SOLUTION
We will focus on the fractionation of liquid solutions. Gaseous and solid solutions are
beyond the scope of this course. To separate the components of a solution we make
use of the different physical properties of its components (solubility, boiling point).
Liquid solutions form by far the bulk of solutions you have to deal with in common life
and in the chemistry lab. They can have a solid or a liquid as the “hidden” component or
solute. To separate the liquid component you may eventually evaporate the liquid. This
is an easy method but can be only applied if the solute is a solid and the solvent cheap
and non flammable (water).
In the general case simple distillation is used. The solution is heated in a flask and
water vapours are cooled down to condense and finally collected in a separate container.
(See diagram)
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In case the solute is a liquid it will also distil though at a different temperature. But
there is a problem: as both substances evaporate at the moment one starts boiling it
helps the other one to find its way to the gaseous phase into the atmosphere. Both
liquids co-distil and the separation results by all means unsatisfactory. Several simple
distillations will be needed to achieve a reasonable result. Luckily a device called the
fractional distillation column allows accomplishing the same results in just one
operation. In fractional distillation, the vapours condense and go back again to the
flask. As they go down they “plunge” into the ascending vapours and as they mix, a
second vaporisation process occurs and the new vapours are enriched in the most
volatile component. This occurs once and again and finally the outgoing vapours are
almost pure volatile component. The flask is enriched in the less volatile one and so
both components get finally separated.
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Petroleum fractions are separated this way although, being the process a non – stop
distillation, in which crude oil is added continuously into the boiler, the fractions are
collected at different points of the fractionating column
CHROMATOGRAPHY
QUESTIONS AND
PROBLEMS
1- How many phases and how many components are there in each of the following
systems:
a- A spoonful of sugar in 1 cup of water when just added.
b- The same system after three hours.
c- Five iron nails under an aqueous salt solution.
d- An emulsion of salty water and oil in kerosene.
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2- Give some examples of suspensions, emulsions and solutions you can find at
home.
4- The table below shows the solubility of some gases in water at different
temperatures (in g / 100 g water)
6- The following chart shows the solubility curves for 4 different salts. Plot
them and answer the following questions:
a- Which is the general trend for these curves?
b- Which of the salts show “special” behaviours?
c- Which is the less soluble salt at room temperature (20ºC)?
d- How many g of each will dissolve in 250 g of water at 45ºC?