Destroyer molality question

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lcataralc

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Q: what mass of water is needed to dissolve 240g of NaCl to produce .20m aqueous solution.
A: 20kg

now correct me if I'm wrong, but since there are about 4 moles of NaCl, doesn't that mean that there are 8 moles of Na+ and Cl- ions, so since molality=solute mols/solvent mass, shouldn't the answer be 40kg?😕😕😕
 
Yes, there are about 4.106 moles of NaCl.

Which means there are 4.106 of Na+ and 4.106 moles of Cl-.

So if you do 0.2m = 4.106 of NaCl / X kg of water

Solve for X.

You get roughly around 20 kg of water.
 
Q: what mass of water is needed to dissolve 240g of NaCl to produce .20m aqueous solution.
A: 20kg

now correct me if I'm wrong, but since there are about 4 moles of NaCl, doesn't that mean that there are 8 moles of Na+ and Cl- ions, so since molality=solute mols/solvent mass, shouldn't the answer be 40kg?😕😕😕

I think your getting confused with that whole colligative property thing. Remeber molality is just mol/kg solution, it has nothing to do with that. Colligative properties only apply to osmotic pressure, freezing point depression, boiling point elevation, and vapor pressure depression.
 
Thanks for the help! After googling "colligative properties" I found out I was mixing up molality with colligative properties that use Van Hoff's factor (i) in boiling point elevation.
 
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