Question #f2d31

1 Answer
Nov 24, 2017

"0.270 mol L"^(-1)0.270 mol L1

Explanation:

Your starting point here will be to pick a sample of this potassium chloride solution. To make the calculations easier, let's pick a sample that contains exactly "1 kg"1 kg of water, the solvent.

As you know, the molality of the solution tells you the number of moles of solute present in exactly "1 kg"1 kg of the solvent.

In your case, a "0.273-m"0.273-m potassium chloride solution contains 0.2730.273 moles of potassium chloride, the solute, for every "1 kg"1 kg of water. This implies that our sample, which contains exactly "1 kg"1 kg of water, will also contain 0.2730.273 moles of potassium chloride.

Use the molar mass of potassium chloride to convert the number of moles to grams

0.273 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("moles KCl"))) * "74.55 g"/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mole KCl")))) = "20.35 g"

So, this sample contains "1 kg" = 10^3 "g" of water and "20.35 g" of potassium chloride, which means that it has a total mass of

10^3color(white)(.)"g" + "20.35 g" = "1020.35 g"

Next, use the density of the solution to find its volume.

1020.35 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g solution"))) * "1 L solution"/(1.011 * 10^3color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g")))) = "1.00925 L solution"

Now, in order to find the molarity of the solution, you need to figure out how many moles of solute are present in exactly "1 L" of the solution.

Use the fact that "1.00925 L" of this solution contain 0.273 moles of potassium chloride to find the number of moles present in exactly #"1 L"3 of the solution.

1 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("L solution"))) * "0.273 moles KCl"/(1.00925color(red)(cancel(color(black)("L solution")))) = "0.270 moles KCl"

You can thus say that this solution has a molarity of

color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)("molarity = 0.270 mol L"^(-1))))

The answer is rounded to three sig figs, the number of sifg figs you have for your data.