The Foundations of Chemistry

(Marcin) #1
A label that shows the analysis of
sulfuric acid.

3-7 Dilution of Solutions 107

Plan


The density of a solution, grams per milliliter, is numerically equal to its specific gravity, so
the density of the solution is 1.84 g/mL. The solution is 96.4% H 2 SO 4 by mass; therefore 100. g
of solution contains 96.4 g of pureH 2 SO 4. From this information, we can find the molarity of
the solution. First, we calculate the mass of one liter of solution.


Solution


1.84 103 g soln/L soln

The solution is 96.4% H 2 SO 4 by mass, so the mass of H 2 SO 4 in one liter is


1.77 103 g H 2 SO 4 /L soln

The molarity is the number of moles of H 2 SO 4 per liter of solution.


18.0 mol H 2 SO 4 /L soln

Thus, the solution is an 18.0 MH 2 SO 4 solution. This problem can also be solved by using a
series of three unit factors.




18.1 mol H 2 SO 4 /L soln 18.1 MH 2 SO 4

You should now work Exercise 68.


1 mol H 2 SO 4

98.1 g H 2 SO 4

96.4 g H 2 SO 4

100 g soln

1000 mL soln

L soln

1.84 g soln

mL soln

__? mol H 2 SO 4

L soln

1 mol H 2 SO 4

98.1 g H 2 SO 4

1.77 103 g H 2 SO 4

L soln

__? mol H 2 SO 4

L soln

96.4 g H 2 SO 4

100.0 g soln

1.84 103 g soln

L soln

__?g H 2 SO 4

L soln

1000 mL soln

L soln

1.84 g soln

mL soln

__? g soln

L soln

Problem-Solving Tip:Write Complete Units

A common pitfall is to write units that are not complete enough to be helpful. For in-

stance, writing the density in Example 3-19 as just doesn’t help us figure

out the required conversions. It is much safer to write , ,




96
1

.
0

4
0

g
g

H
s

2
o

S
ln

O 4
, and so on. In Example 3-19, we have written complete units to help

guide us through the problem.

1000 mL soln

L soln

1.84 g soln

mL soln

1.84 g

mL

DILUTION OF SOLUTIONS


Recall that the definition of molarity is the number of moles of solute divided by the
volume of the solution in liters:


molarity

Multiplying both sides of the equation by the volume, we obtain


volume (in L)molaritynumber of moles of solute

number of moles of solute

number of liters of solution

3-7


ANALYSIS

MAXIMUM LIMITS OF IMPURITIES
Appearance........Passes A.C.S. Test
Color (APHA)....................10 Max.
Residue after Ignition............4 ppm
Chloride (Cl)....................0.2 ppm
Nitrate (NO 3 )...................0.5 ppm
Ammonium (NH 4 ).................1 ppm
Substances Reducing KMnO 4 (limit about
2ppm as SO 2 ).........Passes A.C.S. Test
Arsenic (As)..................0.004 ppm
Heavy Metals (as Pb)..........0.8 ppm
Iron (Fe).........................0.2 ppm
Mercury (Hg).......................5 ppb
Specific Gravity...................~1.84
Normality.............................~36

Assay (H 2 SO 4 ) W/W...Min. 95.0%--Max. 98.0%

Suitable for Mercury Determinations

The small difference is due to
rounding.

See the Saunders Interactive
General Chemistry CD-ROM,
Screen 5.12, Preparing Solutions,
Dilution.
Free download pdf