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Solutions, Suspensions and Colloids

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Presentation on theme: "Solutions, Suspensions and Colloids"— Presentation transcript:

1 Solutions, Suspensions and Colloids
Acids, Bases and Salts

2 Solutions All solutions are made of very small particles that do not affect light beams with: Solute – the chemical that is dispersed Solvent – the chemical that causes dispersal Examples: Salt water, Sugar water, vinegar, Coke, Air, Gold jewelry

3 Properties of Solutions
Solute is homogeneously dispersed All properties are the same throughout solution Particle size is very small Gravity does not affected solutions over time Solute particles can be molecular(as a sugar solution) or ionic (as a salt solution) Ionic solutions will conduct electricity

4 Colloids A mixture with small undissolved particles that do not easily settle out. Particles are larger than a solution but smaller than a suspension Particles are large enough to begin to scatter light (Tyndall Effect) Examples: Milk, gelatin, whipped cream, mayonnaise,

5 Suspensions Much larger particles
Often totally blocks transmission of light Gravity will remove the suspended particles in time to clear the solvent Heterogeneous dispersal of suspended particles Examples: Pepper, sand or dirt in water

6 Comparison of Solutions, Colloids, and Suspensions
< 1 nm > 100 nm solutions colloids suspensions -atoms -small molecules -ions -aggregates of atoms, molecules or ions -macromolecules (proteins) -clumps of particles, -mineral grains such as sand

7 More Comparison… solutions colloids suspensions < 1 nm > 100 nm
transparent (clear) Transparent to Opaque Translucent to Opaque molecular motion Brownian motion movement by gravity never settle coagulation – can settle

8 Using whole blood as an example…
< 1 nm > 100 nm solutions colloids suspensions -dissolved in water electrolytes (salts) gases glucose -plasma proteins albumins globulins fibrinogen -cellular stuff red blood cells white blood cells platelets

9 Dissolving process in water
2. Hydration of solute Orientation of water molecules around solute Na+ Cl- 1. Overcome attractive forces in solid

10 Pure Water Non-electrolyte - No dissociation,
no conductivity Non-electrolyte - No dissociation, all molecules in solution. No Ions are present to allow electrons to pass. H20

11 Types of solutes Strong Electrolyte - 100% dissociation,
high conductivity Strong Electrolyte - 100% dissociation, all ions in solution Na+ Cl-

12 Types of solutes Weak Electrolyte - partial dissociation,
slight conductivity Weak Electrolyte - partial dissociation, molecules and ions in solution CH3COOH CH3COO- H+

13 Types of solutes Non-electrolyte - No dissociation,
no conductivity Non-electrolyte - No dissociation, all molecules in solution sugar

14 Solubility of Solutes in Water
Most solids (endothermic hydration) All gases Solubility, g/100 mL water Some solids (exothermic hydration) Temperature

15 How do I get sugar to dissolve faster in my iced tea?
Stir, and stir, and stir Fresh solvent contact and interaction with solute Add sugar to warm tea then add ice Faster rate of dissolution at higher temperature Grind the sugar to a powder Greater surface area, more solute-solvent interaction


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