S E C H: Olubility Quilibrium of Alcium Ydroxide
S E C H: Olubility Quilibrium of Alcium Ydroxide
S E C H: Olubility Quilibrium of Alcium Ydroxide
ABSTRACT
The experiment aims to determine the solubility product constant of the ionic
salt Calcium Hydroxide. The prepared media containing the ionic salt were tested
by introducing different factors that affects the solubility such as temperature,
common-ion effect, diverse-ion effect and the solvent polarity. The data was
computed to yield varying concentrations of OH - from which the concentration of
Ca2+ was obtained, which is also the solubility of the compound. Further calculations
showed that the increase in ionic strength increases the solubility. Also, the effect of
common-ion and diverse-ion introduced to the solution was observed. The
experiment yielded an experimental value of 3.15 x10 -5 Ksp which deviates greatly
from the literature value. The experiment can be improved by accuracy in the
concentrations of saturated solutions and titration techniques.
INTRODUCTION
Slightly soluble salts, when placed in
water,
undergo
an
equilibrium
reaction. The following reaction is the
same as the equilibrium reaction
involved in this dissolution where AxBy
is a hypothetical solid:
AxBy(s) xAy+(aq) + yBx+(aq) (1)
From this type of reaction the
equilibrium constant Keq can be
referred to as the solubility product
constant. A substance's solubility
product
constant,
Ksp,
is
the
mathematical product of its dissolved
ion concentrations raised to the power
(4)
METHODOLOGY
In order to determine the molar
solubility of Ca(OH)2, different media
were prepared in 250-mL beakers.
Medium A, B and C were all 50 mL
water
in
different
temperature.
Medium D was prepared using 50 mL
0.10 M CaCl2 in room temperature,
medium E with 50 mL 0.50 M Kcl in
room temperature and medium F with
45 mL distilled water and 5 mL 95%
ethanol in room temperature. Ca(OH)2
was added vigorously until the
solution became saturated. The media
were stirred for 5 minutes and were
left for 10 minutes. For each medium,
the suspension was filtered. For media
B & C, it was made sure that the
receiving flasks are of the same
temperature as the suspensions. 25mL aliquot were drawn from each of
the medium and were transferred to a
125-ml Erlenmeyer flask. Three drops
of 1% phenolphthalein was added to
each. These were then titrated with
0.10 M HCl until the color of
phenolphthalein vanished to colorless.
Two trials of titration were performed
for each medium.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
2+
[OH ],
M
0.039
0.028
[Ca ],
M
0.0199
0.014
Ksp
0.043
6
0.048
0.72
0.034
0.0218
3.15x10-5
1.098x1
0-5
4.14x10-5
0.124
0.36
0.0172
5.53x10-5
0.187
1.99x10-5
[OH-]
,M
0.03
9
0.02
8
0.04
36
[Ca2+
], M
0.01
99
0.01
4
0.02
18
Solubili
ty
0.0199
0.014
0.0218
0.0
59
0.0
42
0.0
65
D
E
F
0.04
8
0.72
0.03
4
0.12
4
0.36
0.01
72
0.124
0.36
0.0172
Graph 2 Solubility
Strenth of Solvent
vs.
0.5
2
0.7
0.9
ionic
discussed
discussion.
in
the
results
and
REFERENCES:
[1] Brown, Theodore E. Lemay, H.
Eugene, et. Al., 11th edition. Chemistry:
The Central Science. Pearson
Education Inc., 2009.
[2] Petrucci, Ralph H., William S.
Harwood, and Geoffrey F. Herring, 8th
edition. General Chemistry. PrenticeHall, 2002
[6]Solubility Product. (n.d.). Retrieved
from
http://www4.ncsu.edu/~franzen/public
_html/CH201/data/Solubility_Product_C
onstants.pdf
A. Sample Calculations
Trial 1
y = 1613.7x 15.866
Ksp @ 298 K
1/lnK = 1613.7(1/298K) 15.866
Ksp = -10.45
lnK = -H/RT + S/R
slope = -H/R
H = (-1613.7)(8.314) = -13.42 kJ
y-int. = S/R
S = (15.866)(8.314) = 131.94 J