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Colligative Properties are those properties of a liquid that may be altered by the presence of a solute. Examples vapor pressure melting point boiling.

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Presentation on theme: "Colligative Properties are those properties of a liquid that may be altered by the presence of a solute. Examples vapor pressure melting point boiling."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Colligative Properties are those properties of a liquid that may be altered by the presence of a solute. Examples vapor pressure melting point boiling point osmotic pressure.

3 VAPOR PRESSURE The term "vapor" is applied to the gas of any compound that would normally be found as a liquid at room temperature and pressure For example, water, gasoline, rubbing alcohol, and finger nail polish remover (ethyl acetate) are all normally liquids, but they all evaporate to give a gas.

4 The molecules that are found on the upper side have only about half as many neighbors as do molecules inside the liquid so to begin with the forces holding them in the liquid are slightly lower than molecules in the bulk liquid. The rate at which a given volume of liquid will evaporate is determined by the surface area.

5 In order for a molecule to break free of the liquid and go into the gas phase (evaporate) its kinetic energy must be greater than the forces holding it into the liquid. We recall that the distribution of kinetic energies in a collection of molecules is described by the Maxwell-Boltzmann relationship, so that at a given temperature only the fraction of molecules with kinetic energies greater than the intermolecular forces (as shown below) will be able to break free.

6 *the number of molecules with energies sufficient to break free will be proportional to the temperature. As the temperature increases a greater fraction of the molecules may break free. NOTE: *At a given temperature, a liquid with low intermolecular forces will have a larger fraction of its molecules with sufficient kinetic energy to evaporate than a liquid with higher intermolecular forces. Another way of saying this is that the liquid with low intermolecular forces has a higher vapor pressure than a liquid with higher intermolecular forces.

7 Equilibrium Vapor Pressure If we put the beaker in a closed chamber a slightly different phenomenon occurs. Now molecules from the liquid evaporate as before, but some of these evaporated molecules may also return to the liquid.

8 Boltzman curve in which we assume that only those molecules with energies in excess of some value (which we loosely relate to the Intermolecular Force) will be able to break free and go into the vapor phase. Obviously, surface area is important, but it doesn't affect the equilibrium vapor pressure, only the rate at which equilibrium is achieved. A simple Boltzman curve is illustrated below: Boltzman curve

9 Recall that we think of the area under the curve as representing all of the molecules in a container. If we had 1,000,000 molecules, then the area would represent these 1,000,000 molecules. Imagine we are going to make a solution in which we're going to dissolve some nonvolatile compound into our liquid. In real life we'd just put the compound into our liquid, but since we're trying to focus on the effect on the Boltzman curve, imagine we remove 1,000 solvent molecules and put in 1,000 solute molecules. This way we still have 1,000,000 molecules represented by the curve. Since the properties of the solvent and solute molecules should be additive, we can think of the Boltzman curve as being the sums of a Boltzman curve for the solvent and one for the solute.

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11 When a nonvolatile solute is added to a liquid to form a solution, the vapour pressure above the solution decreases

12 . Liquid molecules at the surface of a liquid can escape to the gas phase when they have a sufficient amount of energy to break free of the liquid's intermolecular forces. That vaporization process is reversible. Gaseous molecules coming into contact with the surface of a liquid can be trapped by intermolecular forces in the liquid. Eventually the rate of escape will equal the rate of capture to establish a constant, equilibrium vapor pressure above the pure liquid. The reasons If we add a nonvolatile solute to that liquid, the amount of surface area available for the escaping solvent molecules is reduced because some of that area is occupied by solute particles. Therefore, the solvent molecules will have a lower probability to escape the solution than the pure solvent. That fact is reflected in the lower vapor pressure for a solution relative to the pure solvent. That statement is only true if the solvent is nonvolatile. If the solute has its own vapor pressure, then the vapor pressure of the solution may be greater than the vapor pressure of the solvent.

13 On the surface of the pure solvent (shown on the left) there are more solvent molecules at the surface than in the right- hand solution flask. Therefore, it is more likely that solvent molecules escape into the gas phase on the left than on the right. Therefore, the solution should have a lower vapor pressure than the pure solvent.

14 Raoult's law states that the vapor pressure of a solution, P, equals the mole fraction of the solvent,  solvent, multiplied by the vapor pressure of the pure solvent, P o. P =  solvent * P o The French chemist Francois Raoult discovered the law that mathematically describes the vapor pressure lowering phenomenon.

15 Raoult's law, is easy to understand. When the solvent is pure, and the mole fraction of the solvent is equal to 1, P is equal to P o. As the mole fraction of the solvent becomes smaller, the vapor pressure of the solvent escaping from the solution also becomes smaller. Let's assume, for the moment, that the solvent is the only component of the solution that is volatile enough to have a measurable vapor pressure. If this is true, the vapor pressure of the solution will be equal to the vapor pressure of the solvent escaping from the solution. Raoult's law suggests that the difference between the vapor pressure of the pure solvent and the solution increases as the mole fraction of the solvent decreases. Solutions that obey Raoult's law are called ideal solutions because they behave exactly as we would predict. Solutions that show a deviation from Raoult's law are called non-ideal solutions because they deviate from the expected behavior.

16 This has no effect on the rate at which solvent molecules in the gas phase condense to form a liquid. But it decreases the rate at which the solvent molecules in the liquid can escape into the gas phase. As a result, the vapor pressure of the solvent escaping from a solution should be smaller than the vapor pressure of the pure solvent. When a solute is added to the solvent, some of the solute molecules occupy the space near the surface of the liquid. When a solute is dissolved in a solvent, the number of solvent molecules near the surface decreases, and the vapor pressure of the solvent decreases.

17 The change in the vapor pressure that occurs when a solute is added to a solvent is therefore a colligative property. If it depends on the mole fraction of the solute, then it must depend on the ratio of the number of particles of solute to solvent in the solution but not the identity of the solute.


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