Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Aqueous Solutions


Water is a very polar molecule, meaning it has a partial positive charge on the hydrogen end and a partial negative charge on the oxygen end.  This is caused by the unequal sharing of electrons by the hydrogen and oxygen atoms.

Because water is polar, it will dissolve most ionic compounds.  Since ionic compounds are composed of a positive ion (cation) and a negative ion (anion), the opposite charged end of a water molecule will be attracted and break a large crystal into smaller pieces.  This is called hydration. If the molecules are completely broken into their ions by water, it is called dissociation.

For instance, table salt (NaCl) will completely dissociate in water. Every single molecule will be broken apart into ions and kept apart by the water molecules.
NaCl (aq) --> Na+ (aq) + Cl- (aq)

In chemistry, STRONG means that every molecule will dissociate when dissolved in water.  WEAK means that it partially dissociates, or that only some of the particles will dissociate while others will remain in neutral/molecular form.

Strong acids, strong bases and strong electrolytes will always dissociate when dissolved in water.  Weak acids, weak bases and weak electrolytes may or may not dissociate.

2 comments:

  1. Why is hydrochloric acid HCl instead of HClO3-?

    ReplyDelete
  2. HClO3- is chloric acid
    hydro-ic is from the element alone
    -ic comes from -ate

    for more info-
    http://ehschemcorner.blogspot.com/2012/10/naming-acids.html

    ReplyDelete