Question #cd6f3

1 Answer
Apr 8, 2017

"2 mL"

Explanation:

For starters, let's assume that the volume of iron(III) chloride solution that must be added to "1 L" of water is small enough to allow for the approximation

V_ "solution" = V_ "water" + V_ ("FeCl"_ 3) ~~ V_ "water"

Judging by the number of significant figures you have for your values, the approximation will definitely hold.

Now, a "1 ppm" solution will contain "1 g" of solute for every 10^6 "g" of solution. Consequently, a "800 ppm" solution will contain "800 g" of iron(III) chloride for every 10^6 "g" of solution.

If you take water's density to be equal to "1 g mL"^(-1), you can say that your solution will have a mass of

1 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("L"))) * (10^3color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mL"))))/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("L")))) * "1 g"/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mL")))) = 10^3 "g"

This means that your solution must contain

10^3 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g solution"))) * overbrace("800 g FeCl"_3/(10^6color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g solution")))))^(color(blue)("= 800 ppm")) = "0.800 g FeCl"_3

Assuming that your iron(III) chloride solution is 40% mass by volume, i.e. it contains "40 g" of iron(III) chloride for every "100 mL" of water, you can say that in order to get "0.800 g" of iron(III) chloride, you must take a volume of

0.800 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g FeCl"_3))) * overbrace("100 mL solution"/(40color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g FeCl"_3)))))^(color(blue)("= 40% m/v")) = color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)("2 mL solution")))

The answer is rounded to one significant figure.

As you can see, we have

V_"800 ppm solution" = 10^3color(white)(.)"mL" + "2 mL" ~~ 10^3 "mL"

You can thus say that if you take "2 mL" of "40% m/v" iron(III) chloride solution and add it to "1 L" of water, you will end up with a solution that is "800 ppm" iron(II) chloride.