Question #1f4c5

1 Answer
Oct 18, 2017

"4.00 mol L"^(-1)

Explanation:

For starters, you know that the density of pure water is approximately equal to "1.00 g mL"^(-1). By comparison, this aqueous solution has a density of "1.25 g mL"^(-1).

The idea here is that the difference between the mass of "1 mL" of pure water and the mass of "1 mL" of this solution will represent the mass of the solute.

For "1 mL" of this solution, you have

overbrace("1.25 g")^(color(blue)("mass of solution")) - overbrace("1.00 g")^(color(blue)("mass of solvent")) = overbrace("0.25 g")^(color(blue)("mass of solvent"))

Use the molar mass of the solvent to find the number of moles present in "1 mL" of this solution.

0.25 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) * "1 mole solute"/(62.5color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g")))) = "0.00400 moles solute"

As you know, the molarity of the solution tells you the number of moles of solute present in 10^3color(white)(.)"mL" = "1 L" of the solution.

Since you know that "1 mL" contains 0.00400 moles of solute, you can say that 10^3 "mL" will contain

10^3 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mL solution"))) * "0.00400 moles solute"/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mL solution")))) = "4.00 moles solute"

You can thus say that the molarity of the solution is equal to

color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)("molarity = 4.00 mol L"^(-1))))

The answer is rounded to three sig figs.