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If Kb for water is 0.512°C/m, then what is the boiling point of a solution that contains 1.25 mole CaCl2 in 1400 g of water? Show your work.

User Tamby Kojak
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1 Answer

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18 votes

The new boiling point is found essentially the same way as the freezing point, except replacing the freezing point quantities with boiling point quantities:


\Delta T_b=K_bm

Where,

DeltaTb, is the change in boiling point temperature

Kb, is the molal boiling point

m, is the molality

We have to calculate first which is the molality of the solution.


\begin{gathered} \text{Molality}=\frac{\text{moles of solute}}{kg\text{ of disolvent}} \\ \text{Molality}=(1.25molCaCl_2)/(1.4kg)=0.89m \end{gathered}

Now, we replace the know data into the first equation:


\begin{gathered} \Delta T_b=K_bm \\ \Delta T_b=0.512(\degree C)/(m)*0.89m=0.46\degree C \end{gathered}

The boiling point of a solution will be the boiling temperature of water alone plus the temperature delta found:

Tb=100°C + 0.46°C=100.46°C

The boiling point of the solution will be 100.46°C

User AlanSE
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