Question #7deb5

1 Answer
May 29, 2017

The answer is (c) "236 g"

Explanation:

Molality is simply a measure of the number of moles of solute present for every "1 kg" of solvent.

This means that a "1-molal" glucose solution will contain 1 mole of glucose for every "1 kg" of solvent.

"1 molal " implies " 1 mole glucose" color(white)(.)color(blue)("for every")color(white)(.)"1 kg water"

As you know, you have

"1 kg" = 10^3 "g"

This means that your solution will contain

"1 molal " implies " 1 mole glucose" color(white)(.)color(blue)("for every")color(white)(.)10^3color(white)(.)"g water"

Now, the mass of a solution is always equal to

"mass solution = mass solute + mass solvent"

This means that the mass of a "1-molal" glucose solution that contains 1 mole of glucose and 10^3 "g" of water will be equal to

"mass 1-molal solution" = "mass of 1 mole glucose" + 10^3color(white)(.)"g"

To find the mass of 1 mole of glucose, use the compound's molar mass

1 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mole glucose"))) * "180.156 g"/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mole glucose")))) = "180.156 g"

This means that the mass of above solution will be

"mass 1-molal solution" = "180.156 g" + 10^3color(white)(.)"g"

"mass 1-molal solution = 1180.156 g"

Now, you need your target solution to contain

"0.2 moles glucose" = "1 mole glucose"/color(red)(5)

Since solutions are homogeneous mixtures, i.e. they have the same composition throughout, you can say that the mass of solution that will contain 0.2 moles of glucose will be

"mass solution" = "1180.156 g"/color(red)(5) ~~ color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)("236 g")))