If #"6.5 g"# of solute #X# is dissolved in #"50 g"# of ether solvent (#"74 g/mol"#) whose vapor pressure dropped from #"445 mm Hg"# to #"410 mm Hg"#, what is the molar mass of #X#?

1 Answer
Jun 19, 2017

I got #"112.88 g/mol"#, though you only have two sig figs. If you use #"74 g/mol"# for the ether molecular weight, you'd get #"112.78 g/mol"#.


This is asking you to use Raoult's law to look at vapor pressure reduction from #P_A^"*"# to #P_A#:

#P_A = chi_(A(l))P_A^"*"#

where:

  • #P_A# is the vapor pressure of solvent #A#.
  • #"*"# indicates pure solvent.
  • #chi_(A(l)) = (n_A)/(n_A + n_X)# is the mol fraction of #A# in the solution phase. #n_A# is mols of solvent #A#.

Ether is also called diethyl ether, or #"H"_3"C""H"_2"C"-"O"-"CH"_2"CH"_3#, indeed with a molecular weight of #"74.122 g/mol"#. I'll use that, since it's more accurate. Given the mass of solute, we need its mols to find its molar mass.

Those mols can be found from the mol fraction.

#chi_(A(l)) = P_A/P_A^"*"#

#= ("410 mm Hg")/("445 mm Hg")#

#= n_A/(n_A + n_X) = 0.9213#

We know the mols of the solvent to be:

#n_A = m_A/M_A = 50 cancel"g" xx "1 mol ether"/(74.122 cancel"g")#,

(#m# being the mass in #"g"# and #M# being the molar mass in #"g/mol"#.)

#=> n_A = # #"0.6746 mols ether"#

So, we can solve for the mols of the solute #X#.

#0.9213 = ("0.6746 mols ether")/("0.6746 mols ether" + n_X)#

#=> 0.9213 (0.6746 + n_X) = 0.6746#

#=> 0.6215 + 0.9213n_X = 0.6746#

#=> n_X = "0.05758 mols"#

This means the molar mass of #X# is:

#color(blue)(M_X) = m_X/n_X = "6.5 g X"/"0.05758 mols X" = color(blue)("112.88 g/mol")#

though you only have two sig figs, apparently.