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A chemist wants to extract a solute from 100 mL of water using only 300 mL of ether. The partition coefficient between ether and water is 2.61 . Calculate q , the fraction of solute that would remain in the water under each of the extraction conditions. The chemist performs a single extraction with 300 mL of ether.

User Evgeniya
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1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:

11.32%

Step-by-step explanation:

Let's use as a calculus base 100 moles of the solute in water. If we call the number of moles of it that remains in water as x, the number of moles that is extracted in ether is 100 - x.

The partion coefficient is the concentration in the organic fraction (ether) divided by the concentration in water. And the concentration is the number of moles divided by the volume, thus:


2.61 = ((100 - x)/(300) )/((x)/(100) )


2.61 = (100 - x)/(300)*(100)/(x)


2.61 = (100-x)/(3x)

7.83x = 100 - x

8.83x = 100

x = 11.32 moles

Thus, the fraction that remains in water is the number of moles divided by the total multiplied by 100%

q = 11.32%

User Sertaconay
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