Anmelden

The addition of an inert ionic compound increases the solubility of a sparingly soluble salt. For example, adding potassium nitrate to a saturated solution of calcium sulfate significantly enhances the solubility of calcium sulfate. Le Châtelier's principle cannot predict this shift in the equilibrium. Instead, this could be explained in terms of changes in the effective concentration of the ions in solution in the presence of added inert salt.

In this solution, the primary cation—the calcium ion—is surrounded by the primary anion—the sulfate ion—which in turn is surrounded by calcium ions, forming ionic atmospheres around each ion. Additionally, the primary cation and anion are surrounded by the oppositely charged ions of the added inert salt. The ions from the inert compound in the ionic atmosphere causes the net charge on the primary ions—calcium and sulfate, in this case—to decrease, reducing the frequency of precipitation. This shifts the equilibrium towards the dissociated ion, increasing the solubility of the sparingly soluble salt. This phenomenon is termed the salt effect, electrolyte effect, or diverse ion effect.

The salt effect is highly dependent on the ionic strength of the solution. With an increase in the ionic strength of the solution, more ions diffuse in the ionic atmosphere, causing the net charge on the primary ion to be even lower, facilitating greater dissociation of the salt. Additionally, the charge on the ions constituting the sparingly soluble salt affects the extent of the salt effect. For example, the solubility of doubly charged ions, such as those constituting barium sulfate, is influenced more than the solubility of singly charged ions, such as those constituting silver chloride, by the same concentration of potassium nitrate.

Tags
Ionic StrengthChemical EquilibriaSolubilitySparingly Soluble SaltPotassium NitrateCalcium SulfateLe Chatelier s PrincipleIonic AtmosphereNet ChargePrecipitationSalt EffectElectrolyte EffectDiverse Ion EffectCharge InfluenceBarium SulfateSilver Chloride

Aus Kapitel 2:

article

Now Playing

2.2 : Ionic Strength: Effects on Chemical Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

1.2K Ansichten

article

2.1 : Ionic Strength: Overview

Chemical Equilibria

1.1K Ansichten

article

2.3 : Thermodynamics: Chemical Potential and Activity

Chemical Equilibria

763 Ansichten

article

2.4 : Thermodynamics: Activity Coefficient

Chemical Equilibria

1.1K Ansichten

article

2.5 : Chemical Equilibria: Redefining Equilibrium Constant

Chemical Equilibria

472 Ansichten

article

2.6 : Factors Affecting Activity Coefficient

Chemical Equilibria

646 Ansichten

article

2.7 : Chemical Equilibria: Systematic Approach to Equilibrium Calculations

Chemical Equilibria

555 Ansichten

article

2.8 : Acid–Base Equilibria: Activity-Based Definition of pH

Chemical Equilibria

486 Ansichten

article

2.9 : Ladder Diagrams: Acid–Base Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

391 Ansichten

article

2.10 : Ladder Diagrams: Redox Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

393 Ansichten

article

2.11 : Ladder Diagrams: Complexation Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

286 Ansichten

article

2.12 : Solubility Equilibria: Overview

Chemical Equilibria

511 Ansichten

article

2.13 : Solubility Equilibria: Ionic Product of Water

Chemical Equilibria

880 Ansichten

article

2.14 : Complexation Equilibria: Overview

Chemical Equilibria

529 Ansichten

article

2.15 : Complexation Equilibria: The Chelate Effect

Chemical Equilibria

379 Ansichten

See More

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten