Monday, May 18, 2020

What Is the Difference Between Molarity and Molality

Molarity and molality are both measures of the concentration of a chemical solution. Molarity is the ratio of moles to volume of the solution (mol/L) while molality is the ratio of moles to the mass of the solvent (mol/kg). Most of the time, it doesnt matter which unit of concentration you use. However, molality is preferred when a solution will undergo temperature changes because altering temperature affects volume (thus changing the concentration if molarity is used).​ Molarity, also known as molar concentration, is the number of moles of a substance per liter of solution. Solutions labeled with the molar concentration are denoted with a capital M. A 1.0 M solution contains 1 mole of solute per liter of solution.​ Molality is the number of moles of solute per kilogram of solvent. It is important the mass of solvent is used and not the mass of the solution. Solutions labeled with molal concentration are denoted with a lower case m. A 1.0 m solution contains 1 mole of solute per kilogram of solvent.​ For aqueous solutions (solutions where water is the solvent) near room temperature, the difference between molar and molal solutions is negligible. This is because around room temperature, water has a density of 1 kg/L. This means the per L of molarity is equal to the per kg of molality. For a solvent like ethanol where the density is 0.789 kg/L, a 1 M solution would be 0.789 m. The important part of remembering the difference is: molarity - M → moles per liter solutionmolality - m → moles per kilogram solvent

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.