What mass of water and urea were mixed, if the mol fraction of urea is #0.0825# and #"60 g"# of solution is present?
2 Answers
The key is to know when to assume that the molar mass of the solution is the molar mass of the solvent, and when you can't.
That only works when the mol fraction of solute is really, really small (generally less than
Otherwise, you still want to make sure conservation of mass still works, and that generally requires more work...
which would eventually give, for solute
#m_i = (chi_imM_(m,i))/(chi_jM_(m,j) + chi_iM_(m,i))#
The definition of mol fraction
#chi_i = n_i/(n_1 + n_2 + . . . + n_N)# where
#N# is the number of components in the solution, and#n_i# is the#"mol"# s of component#i# .
For a two component solution of urea and water,
Note that the relationship of mass
#M_m = m/n# , or#m = nM_m#
So, if we divide the mass by the molar mass, we can convert the mass to mols for a substance we know the mass of in solution.
For your example:
#chi_"urea" = 0.0825 = n_"urea"/(n_"urea" + n_"water")#
#chi_"water" = 1 - chi_"urea" = 0.9175#
Unfortunately, since mol fractions are designed for mols and NOT masses, if we know the mass of the entire solution rather than the solvent only or the solute only, it does not make physical sense to use either the molar mass of urea or water to calculate the needed
In other words, the mass percent of urea in solution is not equal to the mol fraction of urea in solution because
SOLUTION BY ASSUMPTION
Provided the solution is sufficiently dilute (if
What if
#0.0025n_"tot" = n_"urea" = "0.008325 mols urea"#
#0.9975n_"tot" = n_"water" = "3.321675 mols water"#
#"0.008325 mols urea" xx "60.06 g urea"/"1 mol" = color(blue)("0.50 g urea")#
#"3.321675 mols water" xx "18.015 g water"/"1 mol" = color(blue)("59.84 g water")#
That's only an apparent
Therefore, if
CONSIDERING CONSERVATION OF MASS AS AN ADDITIONAL EQUATION
You could also incorporate:
#m_"tot" = m_"water" + m_"urea"#
so that
#n_i = m_i/M_(m,i)#
#n_j = (m - m_i)/M_(m,j)#
From the definition of
#=> chi_i = (m_i/M_(m,i))/(m_i/M_(m,i) + (m - m_i)/M_(m,j))#
#= (m_i/M_(m,i))/((m_iM_(m,j) + (m - m_i)M_(m,i))/(M_(m,i)M_(m,j))#
#= (m_i/cancel(M_(m,i)))*(cancel(M_(m,i))M_(m,j))/(m_iM_(m,j) + (m - m_i)M_(m,i))#
#= (m_iM_(m,j))/(m_iM_(m,j) + (m - m_i)M_(m,i))#
Or, solving for
#chi_im_iM_(m,j) + chi_i(m - m_i)M_(m,i) = m_iM_(m,j)#
#chi_im_iM_(m,j) + chi_imM_(m,i) - chi_im_iM_(m,i) = m_iM_(m,j)#
#chi_im_iM_(m,j) - chi_im_iM_(m,i) - m_iM_(m,j) = -chi_imM_(m,i)#
#m_i[chi_iM_(m,j) - chi_iM_(m,i) - M_(m,j)] = -chi_imM_(m,i)#
Therefore:
#color(green)(m_i) = -(chi_imM_(m,i))/(chi_iM_(m,j) - chi_iM_(m,i) - M_(m,j))#
#= -(chi_imM_(m,i))/(cancel(M_(m,j)) - chi_jM_(m,j) - chi_iM_(m,i) - cancel(M_(m,j)))#
#= -(chi_imM_(m,i))/(-chi_jM_(m,j) - chi_iM_(m,i))#
#= bb(color(green)((chi_imM_(m,i))/(chi_jM_(m,j) + chi_iM_(m,i))))#
Plugging in actual numbers, we'd get:
#color(blue)(m_"urea") = (0.0825("60 g")("60.06 g/mol"))/((1-0.0825)("18.015 g/mol") + (0.0825)("60.06 g/mol"))#
#=# #color(blue)("13.84 g urea")#
which by conservation of mass gives you
#color(blue)(m_"water") = "60.00 g" - "13.84 g urea" = color(blue)("46.16 g water")#
Given that total mass of aqueous solution of urea is
Molar mass of urea
Molar mass of water
Let the mass of urea in the solution be
Then the mass of water in the solution
The number of moles of urea in the solution
The number of moles of water in the solution
It is also given that mole fraction of urea in solution is
By definition the mole fraction of urea in water-urea mixture is
Inserting the values in this relation we get
So