Transcript Activity 3

Activity 37 Analysis
1. In this investigation, which substance(s) are
solutes and which are solvent(s)?
• Sodium chloride and copper chloride are solutes
• Water is the solvent each time
• Part of iron chloride is the solute (water turned a clear
brownish color), most didn’t dissolve
• Cornstarch was not a solute
2. A substance that dissolves in water can be
described as soluble in water
a. List the four solids in order from most to least soluble in
water.
b. Explain what evidence enabled you to order the
substance by solubility
•
•
•
•
•
•
Copper chloride, sodium chloride, iron chloride, cornstarch
All 5 scoops of copper chloride dissolved in the water
Liquid in the filter remained light blue
1 scoop of sodium chloride dissolved completely & not quite all of
the 5 scoops did
Iron chloride is only slightly soluble; water became slightly brown
and most remained solid; stayed in the filter
Cornstarch least soluble; appeared to mix in but settled out if it sat;
amount in the filter looked like original amount; liquid was clear after
filtering (milky white before)
3. a. Must a liquid be clear to be a solution?
Explain.
•
•
Yes
If it isn’t clear, there are still large particles in
the mixture
b. Must a mixture be colorless to be a solution?
Explain.
• No
• Copper chloride completely mixed in and it
was blue
• It’s a solution even if it has color
4. Imagine that all four of the tested solids
are considered water pollutants. Which
would be easiest to remove from the
water? Explain.
•
•
•
Cornstarch
Particles don’t dissolve; can be removed
with a filter
Most of the iron chloride could be removed
with a filter
Design your own experiment
• In activity 38, you will write your own
procedure and design a data table to
collect the data.
• You are going to test the ability of several
different solids to dissolve in two liquids:
ethanol and water
• What are the solvents?
• What are the solutes?
Activity 38
Title: Dissolving Duel
Read C-43
Problem: Do substances dissolve better in
water or in ethanol?
Hypothesis:
Fill in the chart below and check the box under the solvent
you think will work better to dissolve the material.
Substance
Dissolve
better in
water
Dissolve
better in
ethanol
Substance
Cornstarch
Lauric Acid
Sugar
Copper Sulfate
Sodium
Chloride
Iron Chloride
Neronline Yara
Yara
Dissolve
better in
water
Dissolve
better in
ethanol
Design a procedure & data table
• Use the procedure in activity 37 as a guide
• Make sure your experiment is reproducible
(someone could read your procedure and do
it exactly as you did---don’t leave any steps
out)
• The purpose is to compare the solvents,
consider whether you need to vary the
number of scoops you use for each solute.
• Design a data table
• What type of results are important to record?
• Work in your group on a separate sheet
of paper (one person write it) to
brainstorm ideas and steps for your
procedure
• Do not write your procedure or data
table in your notebook until it has been
approved by your teacher
• Think of a way to minimize the amount
of each solvent and solute you use
• Compare your procedure with other
groups to get feedback
Sample Procedure
1. Decide which team of two will use water as the solvent
and which will use ethanol.
2. Place one level scoop of each solute in the appropriate
cup (as listed in the table).
3. Add 10 drops of your team’s solvent to each cup.
4. Use the stir stick to stir each cup for 30 seconds. Clean
the stick after stirring each substance.
5. Record your team’s observations in your data table.
6. Trade trays with the other team, and record your own
observations of their mixtures in your notebook data
table.
Data/Observation:
Table: Comparing Solubilities in Water and Ethanol
Or two tables:
Results: