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12.12:

Electrolytes: van't Hoff Factor

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Chemistry
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JoVE Core Chemistry
Electrolytes: van’t Hoff Factor

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Colligative properties of a solution depend on the actual number of dissolved solute particles.  For a non-electrolyte, each solute molecule that dissolves yields one dissolved solute molecule.  However, ionic electrolytes, such as sodium chloride, dissociate into ions when dissolved, while ammonia gas, a covalent electrolyte, reacts with water to release ammonium and hydroxide ions in solution.  So for electrolytes, each solute molecule that dissolves yields more than one dissolved solute particle.  Thus, a 1 M solution of a non-electrolyte such as dextrose, will have 1 mole of dextrose molecules in a 1-liter solution, whereas a 1 M solution of an electrolyte such as potassium chloride will dissociate into nearly 1 mole of potassium ions and 1 mole of chloride ions– a total of 2 moles of ions in a 1-liter solution. With double the number of solute particles, the osmotic pressure of a 1 M potassium chloride solution will be twice that of a 1 M dextrose solution. The ratio between the moles of particles that a dissolving solute forms in solution and the moles of solute added to make a solution, is called the van’t Hoff factor represented by i. It is calculated by dividing the measured value of a colligative property by the value calculated from a formula. Consider the freezing point depression of a potassium chloride solution. Freezing-point depression, ΔTf, is calculated by multiplying the van’t Hoff factor for potassium chloride with the molal freezing-point-depression constant and the molality of the solute. If i is 2 and the freezing point depression constant for water is 1.86 °C/m, the freezing-point depression of a 0.100 m potassium chloride solution is calculated to be 0.372 °C. However, the measured freezing point depression for a 0.100 m potassium chloride solution is 0.344 °C. This difference exists because when an electrolyte dissociates into ions in solution, some of the cations and anions recombine. This phenomenon is called ion pairing. Strong electrolytes with highly charged ions, such as iron(III) chloride and magnesium sulfate, can form strong electrostatic interactions and thus have a greater tendency to form ion pairs. For weak electrolytes, such as ammonium hydroxide, the dissociation into ions is incomplete. Thus, for both strong and weak electrolytes, the van’t Hoff factor is less than expected. 

12.12:

Electrolytes: van't Hoff Factor

Colligative Properties of Electrolytes

The colligative properties of a solution depend only on the number, not on the identity, of solute species dissolved. The concentration terms in the equations for various colligative properties (freezing point depression, boiling point elevation, osmotic pressure) pertain to all solute species present in the solution. Nonelectrolytes dissolve physically without dissociation or any other accompanying process. Each molecule that dissolves yields one dissolved solute molecule. The dissolution of an electrolyte, however, is not this simple, as illustrated by the two common examples below:

Eq1

Considering the first of these examples, and assuming complete dissociation, a 1.0 m aqueous solution of NaCl contains 2.0 moles of ions (1.0 mol Na+ and 1.0 mol Cl) per each kilogram of water, and its freezing point depression is expected to be

Eq2

However, when this solution is actually prepared and its freezing point depression is measured, a value of 3.4 °C is obtained. Similar discrepancies are observed for other ionic compounds, and the differences between the measured and expected colligative property values typically become more significant as solute concentrations increase. These observations suggest that the ions of sodium chloride (and other strong electrolytes) are not completely dissociated in solution.

To account for this and avoid the errors accompanying the assumption of total dissociation, an experimentally measured parameter named in honor of Nobel Prize-winning German chemist Jacobus Henricus van’t Hoff is used. The van’t Hoff factor (i) is defined as the ratio of solute particles in solution to the number of formula units dissolved:

Eq3

In 1923, the chemists Peter Debye and Erich Hückel proposed a theory to explain the apparent incomplete ionization of strong electrolytes. They suggested that although interionic attraction in an aqueous solution is very greatly reduced by solvation of the ions and the insulating action of the polar solvent, it is not completely nullified. The residual attractions prevent the ions from behaving as totally independent particles. In some cases, a positive and negative ion may actually touch, giving a solvated unit called an ion pair. Thus, the activity—or the effective concentration—of any particular kind of ion is less than that indicated by the actual concentration. Ions become more and more widely separated as the solution becomes more dilute and the residual interionic attractions become less and less. Thus, in extremely dilute solutions, the effective concentrations of the ions (their activities) are essentially equal to the actual concentrations. For 0.05 m solutions, the value of i for NaCl is 1.9, as opposed to an ideal value of 2.

This text is adapted from Openstax, Chemistry 2e, Section 11.4: Colligative Properties.

Suggested Reading

  1. Van Houten, Josh. "A century of chemical dynamics traced through the Nobel Prizes. 1901: Jacobus van't Hoff." Journal of Chemical Education 78, no. 12 (2001): 1570.
  2. Harned, Herbert S. "Activity Coefficients And Colligative Properties Of Electrolytes." Journal of the American Chemical Society 44, no. 2 (1922): 252-267.
  3. Randall, Merle, and Clyve Allen. "The Interpretation Of The Colligative Properties Of Weak Electrolytes." Journal of the American Chemical Society 52, no. 5 (1930): 1814-1823.