A 20*g mass of CaCl_2 was dissolved in 700*g of water. What is the molality of the solution with respect to "calcium chloride"?

2 Answers
Jun 15, 2017

0.25 molal

Explanation:

Chemical formula of Calcium chloride= CaCl_2
Molar mass of CaCl_2 =110.98 gmol^-1
Mass of Calcium chloride (given) = 20g

Molality = m = ("moles of solute")/"kg of solvent"
Now, to calculate no. of moles:
No. of moles = ("mass")/"molar mass"

No. of moles= ("20g")/"110.98g/mol" = 0.180 moles
g of solvent = 700 g
Converting g -> kg
kg of solvent = 0.7kg
Water is solvent while CaCl_2 is solute
Now,

Molality = m = ("moles of solute")/"kg of solvent"
Molality = ("0.180 moles")/"0.7kg"
Molality = 0.25 molal

Jun 15, 2017

"Concentration"-=0.257*"molal".........

Explanation:

"Molality" -= "Moles of solute"/"Kilograms of solvent"

And thus..............................................

"molality"=((20*g)/(110.98*g*mol^-1))/(700*gxx10^-3*kg*g^-1)=0.257*mol*kg.

Note that at (relatively!) low concentrations, the calculated "molality" would be almost the same as solution "molarity". "Molality" is used because the expression is fairly independent of temperature. What is the "molal concentration" with respect to "chloride ion"?