Preparationofsolution 230122134501 54cc5f9c
Preparationofsolution 230122134501 54cc5f9c
By
Amir Mohammed Albushra
MBBS, MSc in Clinical Chemistry.
Solution
Solvent
The substance which dissolves another to form a solution
Saturation
Saturation is the point at which a solution of a substance can dissolve
no more of that substance and additional amounts of it will appear as a
precipitate.
Types of solutions
• Percentage solution
• Molar solution
• Normal solution
A)Weight/volume solution % (w/v)
Weight-volume percentage, (sometimes referred to as mass-volume
percentage and often abbreviated as % m/v or % w/v) describes the
mass of the solute in g per 100 ml of the resulting solution.
Example:
Preparation of 10% (W/V) NaCl solution
Calculations:
Wt of solute (g )=
Note
Do not simply measure 100ml of water and add 10g of sodium chloride.
This will introduce error because adding the solid will change the final
volume of the solution and throw off the final percentage.
B) Volume /volume solution % (v/v)
Volume-volume percentage (abbreviated as % v/v) describes the
volume of the solute in ml per 100 ml of the resulting solution.
Example:
• Preparation of 30% (V/V) sulfuric acid
Calculations:
V1 of solute (ml ) =
Molar solution
It is a solution that contains 1 mole of solute in each liter of solution.
Units of molarity
mol/L.
1 mol/l = 1000 mmol/l = 1000000 μmol/l = 1000000000 nmol/l
Wt of solute (g) = M(mole/L) X M.wt (g/mole) X V (L)
Calculations:
Dissolve 58.5 g of NaCl in a 1000 ml (1 liter) of water to prepare 1M
NaCl
Normal solution
Equivalent weight
An equivalent weight is equal to the molecular weight divided by the
valence.
Normal &Normality
A normal is one gram equivalent of a solute per liter of solution.
Normal solutions
Is a solution that contains 1 gram equivalent weight (gEW) per liter
solution.
Units of Normality
The units for normal concentration are Eq/L.
Eq.wt for Acids and Bases
Eq.wt =
Examples:
• HCL the MW= 36.5 the EW = 36.5
• H₂SO4 the MW = 98 the EW = 49
• H3PO4 the MW = 98 the EW = 32.7
• NaOH the MW = 40 the EW = 40
• Ca (OH)₂ the MW = 74 the EW = 37
Eq.wt for salts
Eq.wt = or
Examples
• KCL the MW= 74.55 the EW = (74.55/1 X 1) = 74.55
• CaCl₂ the MW= 110.98 the EW (110.98/1 X 2) or (110.98/2 X 1) = 55.49
• Na₂CO3 the MW= 105.98 the EW = (105.98/1 X 2) or (105.98/2 X 1) =
52.99
Preparation of Normal solution
Procedure
• Dissolve 40 g of NaOH in a 1000 ml (1 liter) of water to prepare 1N NaOH
solution.
• Dissolve 37 g of Ca (OH)2 in a 1000 ml (1 liter) of water to prepare 1N Ca(OH)₂
solution.
• Dissolve 74.55 g of KCI in a 1000 ml (1 liter) of water to prepare 1N KCI solution.
Dilution
• It is used when we need to make a specific volume of known
concentration from stock solutions.
• To do this we use the following formula:
V°=
• V°: the volume of stock we start with.
• O: Original concentration of stock solution.
• V: Required volume needed.
• R: the required concentration( new concentration.
( V= V°+ volume of diluent).
Example
Suppose we have a stock solution with concentration of 100 mg/dL and
we want to make 200 ml of solution having 25 mg/dL.
V°= V°= = 50ml from stock