Topic 8

Mole, Molarity & Solutions

The mole is chemistry's counting unit — it links the microscopic world of atoms to measurable quantities in the lab. Molarity connects moles to solution volumes.

A. The Mole Concept

What is a Mole?

  • 1 mole = 6.022 × 10²³ particles (Avogadro's Number, Nₐ)
  • Particles can be atoms, molecules, ions, or formula units
  • Molar mass = mass of 1 mole in grams = numerically equal to relative atomic/molecular mass (from periodic table)
  • Molar volume of any gas at STP = 22.4 L/mol (at 0°C, 1 atm)
n = m / M
Moles = Mass (g) ÷ Molar Mass (g/mol)
m = n × M
Mass = Moles × Molar Mass
N = n × Nₐ
Particles = moles × 6.022×10²³
V = n × 22.4
Volume at STP (L) = moles × 22.4
⚡ Common molar masses: H₂O = 18 g/mol · NaCl = 58.5 g/mol · CO₂ = 44 g/mol · H₂SO₄ = 98 g/mol · NaOH = 40 g/mol · HCl = 36.5 g/mol

B. Molarity (Molar Concentration)

Molarity & Concentration Expressions

Molarity (M) M = n / V(L) Molarity = moles of solute ÷ volume of solution in litres. Unit: mol/L or M
% Composition by Mass % = (mass of element / molar mass of compound) × 100
ExpressionFormulaUnit
Molarity (M)mol solute / L solutionmol/L or M
Molality (m)mol solute / kg solventmol/kg
Mass percent(mass solute / mass solution) × 100% (w/w)
Volume percent(volume solute / volume solution) × 100% (v/v)
ppm(mass solute / mass solution) × 10⁶ppm
⚡ Worked Example Dissolve 5.85 g NaCl (M = 58.5 g/mol) in water to make 500 mL solution. What is the molarity?
n = 5.85/58.5 = 0.1 mol · V = 0.5 L · M = 0.1/0.5 = 0.2 mol/L

C. Empirical & Molecular Formulae

Formula Types & Stoichiometry

TermDefinitionExample (Glucose)
Empirical FormulaSimplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a compoundCH₂O
Molecular FormulaActual number of each atom in one moleculeC₆H₁₂O₆
  • Limiting reagent: the reactant completely used up first — determines the maximum product yield
  • Excess reagent: the reactant that remains after the reaction is complete
  • Stoichiometry: uses mole ratios from balanced equations to calculate amounts of reactants and products
  • The mole ratio from the balanced equation is the key to all stoichiometric calculations

D. Solutions

Solution Types & Solubility

TypeDefinitionExample
UnsaturatedCan still dissolve more solute at the given temperatureDilute sugar water
SaturatedCannot dissolve any more solute at a given temperature — at maximum capacitySalt solution at saturation point
SupersaturatedContains MORE solute than normally possible — unstable, crystallises suddenly if disturbedHoney, rock candy, sodium acetate hand warmers
  • Solubility of solids: generally increases with temperature
  • Solubility of gases: decreases with increasing temperature (explains why fizzy drinks go flat when warm)
  • "Like dissolves like": polar solvents (e.g. water) dissolve polar/ionic solutes; non-polar solvents (e.g. hexane) dissolve non-polar solutes

E. Colligative Properties

Properties That Depend on Solute Particle Number

Colligative properties depend only on the number of solute particles dissolved, not on their identity or nature.

PropertyEffectPractical Example
Boiling Point ElevationAdding solute raises the boiling point of the solventSalt water boils above 100°C; antifreeze raises car coolant BP
Freezing Point DepressionAdding solute lowers the freezing point of the solventSalt on icy roads; antifreeze in car radiators; seawater freezes below 0°C
Osmotic PressurePressure needed to stop osmosis across a semipermeable membraneRed blood cells in salt water — water leaves cell (crenation)
Vapour Pressure LoweringSolute particles reduce the vapour pressure of the solventSalt water evaporates more slowly than pure water
⚡ MCQ Tip More solute = higher BP, lower FP. "Like dissolves like." Solubility of gases ↓ with heat. Tyndall effect = colloids only. Solution → Colloid → Suspension (increasing particle size: <1nm → 1-1000nm → >1000nm).

Quick MCQ Revision

FactAnswer
Avogadro's Number6.022 × 10²³ particles per mole
Moles formulan = m / M (mass ÷ molar mass)
Molarity formulaM = n / V(L) — moles per litre
Molar volume at STP22.4 L/mol
Molar mass of H₂O18 g/mol
Molar mass of NaCl58.5 g/mol
Solubility of gas with temperatureDecreases (gases less soluble when hot)
Adding solute to solventRaises BP, lowers FP (colligative properties)
"Like dissolves like"Polar solvents dissolve polar solutes; non-polar dissolves non-polar
Limiting reagentReactant completely used up first — limits product yield
Key