A solution contains 25 mL of ethanol in 100 mL of solution. What is the % v/v?
What is 25%?
The point in which a solid is turned to a liquid based on increasing temperature
What is the melting point?
A type of solution that cannot add any more solute is called
What is saturated?
10 mL of food coloring is added to make 200 mL of solution. What is the % v/v?
What is 5%?
The point in which all states of matter can exist at the same time
What is the triple point?
Water is a primary example of this part of a solution. It is known for doing the dissolving within a solution.
What is a solvent?
A mixture in which the particles are evenly dispersed and uniform.
What is a homogenous mixture?
The ability of a solute to dissolve in a substance at a certain temperature.
What is solubility?
50 mL of vinegar is dissolved into 250 mL of water. What is the percent by volume?
What is 16%?
What is the process in which a gas turns into a liquid is called.
What is condensation?
DOUBLE JEAPRODY ( DOUBLE POINTS)
The following are examples of this:
- Freezing Point Depression
- Boiling Point Elevation
- Osmotic Pressure
What is a colligative property?
A mixture in which the solute is dispersed throughout the solvent but there is a visible difference within the mixture.
What is a heterogenous?
As temperature increases on a solubility graph, what trend do salt solutions take?
What is increasing?
5 mL of perfume is mixed into 50 mL total solution. What is the % v/v?
What is 10%?
Blood falls gets its name from the rusting nature of the water turning the color red. The reason that the water is not freezing is due to the fact that salt ___________ the freezing point of the falls.
What is decreasing?
An example of a homogenous mixture, or a mixture that is uniform throughout
- Air
- Salt water
- Sugar in tea
- Sugar water
etc.
An example of a solute that increases in solubility as the temperature increases?
What is sugar or salt.....
30 mL of juice concentrate is added to make 150 mL of drink. Find the % v/v.
What is 16%?
Colligative properties are shown on a graph called a "Phase Diagram." For water, there are two main dashed lines that run vertically (boiling point and freezing point.) What line runs horizontally and is known to be the pressure at which we survive at?
What is 1 atm or pressure?
The solvent that is sometimes called the "Universal Solvent"
What is water?