Calculate Concentrations of Solutions (Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry)

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Calculate Concentrations of Solutions

Expressing Concentration

  • A solid substance that dissolves in a liquid is called a solute, the liquid is called a solvent and the two when mixed together form a solution
  • Most chemical reactions occur between solutes which are dissolved in solvents, such as water or an organic solvent
  • Concentration simply refers to the amount of solute there is in a specific volume of the solvent
  • The greater the amount of solute in a given volume then the greater the concentration
  • A general formula triangle for concentration is thus:

Concentration moles formula triangle, downloadable IB Chemistry revision notes

The concentration-moles formula triangle 

  • It is useful to a chemist to express concentration in terms of moles per unit volume
  • Concentration can therefore be expressed in moles per decimetre cubed
    • The units in the answer can be written as mol dm-3 or mol/dm3:

  • You may have to convert from g dm-3 into mol dm-3 and vice versa depending on the question
    • To go from g dm-3 to mol dm-3:
      • Divide by the molar mass in grams

    • To go from mol dm-3 to g dm-3:
      • Multiply by the molar mass in grams

Worked example

Example 1:

Calculate the amount of solute, in moles, present in 2.5 dm3 of a solution whose concentration is 0.2 mol dm-3.

Answer:

Calculating Concentrations WE1, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Worked example

Example 2:

Calculate the concentration of a solution of sodium hydroxide, NaOH, in mol dm-3, when 80 g is dissolved in 500 cmof water.

Relative atomic masses, Ar:     Na = 23,     H = 1,     O = 16

Answer:

Calculating Concentrations WE2, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Exam Tip

Don't forget your unit conversions:

To go from cm3 to dm3 : divide by 1000

To go from dm3 to cm3 : multiply by 1000

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Author: Stewart

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