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Concentration Worksheet

This document contains a concentration worksheet with 10 questions asking students to calculate concentrations of solutions, determine if solutions are saturated, explain changes in solubility with temperature, calculate amounts of solute and solvent given concentration and volume, and distinguish between mixtures and compounds. Students are asked to show their work and use correct units.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
282 views2 pages

Concentration Worksheet

This document contains a concentration worksheet with 10 questions asking students to calculate concentrations of solutions, determine if solutions are saturated, explain changes in solubility with temperature, calculate amounts of solute and solvent given concentration and volume, and distinguish between mixtures and compounds. Students are asked to show their work and use correct units.

Uploaded by

cris_itd
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Concentration worksheet

Show all work and use the correct units

1. 65 g of sugar is dissolved in 750ml of water what is the concentration of the


solution?

2. Which is more concentrated 34 g of salt dissolved in 100 ml of water or 100 g of


salt in 1500 ml of water?

3. If the solubility of salt in water was determined to be .5 g/ml would a solution that
had 50 g of salt in 150 ml of water be considered saturated?

4. The solubility of sodium nitrate in water is .8 g/ml at 0 degrees Celsius. The


solubility increases to 1.9 g/ml at 180 degrees Celsius. Explain why this happens.

5. If the concentration of a solution is determined to be .27 g/ml and it was dissolved


in 200 ml of solvent how much solute was used to make it?

6. If the concentration of sugar in water is determined to be .45 g/ml and 100 g of


sugar was used to make the solution how much water was used?
7. Why does pop go flat at room temperature more easily than in the refrigerator?

8. What is the difference between a mixture and a compound?

9. How are the 3 types of mixtures different?

10. Sand is insoluble in water. If you have 50g of sand how much water would you need
to dissolve it?

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