Solutions and Colloids
StudyWork = Study + Homework
In order to perform well on any quiz or test on Solutions, I must
In order to perform well on any quiz or test on Solutions, I must
- Read and study the class notes - Solutions and their Properties
- Complete all worksheets or other work (i.e. ChemActivities) assigned and discuss all answers with my Pod.
- Read and study Ch 11. Solutions and Colloids (online) from openstax Chemistry or downloaded from the following link:
ch_11_solutions_and_colloids_in_openstax_chemistry.pdf | |
File Size: | 3268 kb |
File Type: |
- Read and study Ch. 11 from General Chemistry by Ebbing and Gammon - as needed for my success.
- Review the appropriate learning resources from this website- as needed for my success.
Additional Notes
Notes on Solutions from the National Math & Science Initiative (NMSI):
Notes on Solutions from the National Math & Science Initiative (NMSI):
11_solutions.pdf | |
File Size: | 1183 kb |
File Type: |
Additional Online Textbook
Solutions: their chemistry and physical properties - online chem 1 virtual textbook by Dr. Lower
Solutions: their chemistry and physical properties - online chem 1 virtual textbook by Dr. Lower
Watch This !
Water and Solutions -- for Dirty Laundry: Crash Course Chemistry #7
Dihydrogen monoxide (better know as water) is the key to nearly everything. It falls from the sky, makes up 60% of our bodies, and just about every chemical process related to life takes place with it or in it. Without it, none of the chemical reactions that keep us alive would happen - none of the reactions that sustain any life form on earth would happen - and the majority of inorganic chemical reactions that shape the surface of the earth would not happen either. |
Every one of us uses water for all kinds of chemistry every day - our body chemistry, our food chemistry and our laundry chemistry all take place in water.
In today's Crash Course Chemistry, we use Hank's actual dirty laundry (ew) to learn about some of the properties of water that make it so special - it's polarity and dielectric property; how electrolytes can be used to classify solutions; and we discover how to calculate a solution's molarity as well as how to dilute a solution using the dilution equation.
In today's Crash Course Chemistry, we use Hank's actual dirty laundry (ew) to learn about some of the properties of water that make it so special - it's polarity and dielectric property; how electrolytes can be used to classify solutions; and we discover how to calculate a solution's molarity as well as how to dilute a solution using the dilution equation.
And Watch This !
Solutions: Crash Course Chemistry #27
This week, Hank elaborates on why Fugu can kill you by illustrating the ideas of solutions and discussing molarity, molality, and mass percent. Also, why polar solvents dissolve polar solutes, and nonpolar solvents dissolve nonpolar solutes. All that plus Henry's Law and why Coke = Burps. |