Water & Solutions - for Dirty Laundry: Crash Course Chemistry #7 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

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It falls from the sky, makes up about 60% of our bodies,
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and just about every chemical process related to life takes place with it, or in it: dihydrogen monoxide.
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Without it, none of the chemical reactions that keep you alive would happen.
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None of the reactions that sustain any life form on earth would happen.
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Not even the majority of inorganic chemical reactions that shaped the surface of the earth would happen.
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Water is the key to nearly everything.
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And one of the reasons it's the key, is because it's really good at dissolving stuff.
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We need it so bad, that we dump over 180 gallons of it into our bodies every year,
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and we do that to maintain an aqueous or water based solution inside our cells,
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because aqueous environments are pretty much the best for cool chemistry.
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Each and every one of us uses water for all kinds of chemistry every single day.
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Our body chemistry, our food chemistry and yes, our laundry chemistry, all take place in water. Ew.
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[Theme Music]
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This used to be a white sock. It is now a little bit of gray sock, and in places a little bit of a yellow sock.
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But anyway, I want it to be white again, and to do that I'm gonna need some chemistry.
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To whiten whites, you might use a solution of sodium hypo-chlorate, better known as bleach.
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What makes bleach so good at it's job is that it's a really strong oxidizer,
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meaning that the oxygen atom is really good at pulling electrons away from other compounds, making them break apart.
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This is really handy for getting rid of stains but as you can tell by the formula,
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sodium hypo-chlorate also contains chlorine, which happens to be really good at killing things.
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That's why we use it in swimming pools and as a disinfectant.
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But there are lots of other good oxidizing agents, and one that doesn't contain chlorine is hydrogen peroxide.
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And it can be used as a bleach too, but it's only components are hydrogen and oxygen, just like water.
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We'll talk about oxidation and other kinds of reactions in a couple weeks,
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but before we get to that you have to understand solutions,
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and before we do that I'm just gonna get rid of the laundry because it's kinda stinky.
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This bottle of hydrogen peroxide contains a solution and not just the solution to my
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problem of stained laundry.
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By solution, I mean a solution of liquid with another substance dissolved in it.
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Here water is the liquid, or solvent, and hydrogen peroxide is the solute, or dissolved material.
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And water is an amazing solvent, possibly, arguably, the best solvent on earth.
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Why? A lot of reasons. There's a lot of it on the surface of the earth, that helps. Just abundance is good.
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It's liquid at a very wide range of temperatures and being liquid is what you need to be able to be a solvent.
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But also because it's polar; it's a very polar molecule
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Remember how I said that oxygen is very good at pulling electrons toward it?
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Well, oxygen atoms are more electronegative than hydrogen.
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The oxygen atom pulls harder on the molecule's electrons than the hydrogen does.
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As a result, the electrons in a water molecule tend to spend most of their time near the oxygen,
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giving the oxygen end a partial negative charge, and the hydrogens, a somewhat positive charge.
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This polarity makes water extremely effective at dissolving things, especially other polar things.
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The sugar we mixed into our tea last week, for example, was polar.
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When you mix a polar solid, like sugar, into a polar liquid, like water,
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the molecules of the water surround the sugar molecules
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The negative side of the water molecules is attracted to the positive side of the sugar molecule and vice versa.
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In interacting with the sugar molecules, the water inserts itself between all of the individual
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molecules of the sugar that were once clumped together in the sugar crystals.
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A liter of water can dissolve as much as 1800 grams of sucrose.
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Water based solutions, earlier I called them aqueous solutions.
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And I'm calling it an aqueous solution again so that you remember it's called an aqueoussolution. Aqueous.
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You can create all sorts of aqueous solutions using salts or minerals, even acids.
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Ethanol, which composes 95% of this grain alcohol, is polar. So it dissolves easily in water.
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But water does not dissolve non-ionic, nonpolar substances.
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Oil, for instance, doesn't have any polarity. So it has no interest in interacting with water.
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So when you mix them, they separate.
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Water's polarity also gives it lots of other super useful properties.
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For example, water can decrease the attraction between ions of different charges.
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We call this it's dielectric property.
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Take table salt, for example.
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It's made of positively charged sodium ions and negatively charged chlorine ions.
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When it's mixed with water, the water dissolves the salt into it's component ions.
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The water molecules then surround the individual ions and shield them from each other's electric charges.
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These ions in water are called electrolytes; literally, loosened electricity,
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because separating through dissolution frees them to act independently and carry their electrical charge around.
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You've probably heard about electrolytes in biology class,
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but you've definitely heard about electrolytes in Gatorade commercials.
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Your body needs electrolytes to carry electrical signals that help your muscles twitch,
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and your brain cells fire, and get all the business of living done.
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In addition to helping you live, electrolytes are one of the most important ways chemists
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have of classifying solutions.
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Pure water, on it's own, does not conduct electricity, which seems a little weird to us --
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the whole hairdryer in the bathtub thing still being a terrible idea.
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But if you put a bit of salt or any other ionic solid in the water, they dissolve into those component electrolytes.
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It's the electrolytes that are conducting the electricity.
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It's not what you might expect, but we have Swedish physicist Svante Arrhenius to thank for figuring this out.
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While doing his doctoral research in the 1880s, he first developed the idea that a solution's
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electrical conductivity could be linked to the concentration of ions in the solution.
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It was one of his predecessors, British super-genius Michael Faraday,
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who discovered that substances dissolved in water conduct electric currents.
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Faraday was terrible at naming stuff, so he wrote to a guy who was known for coining terms, William Whewell.
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You may have heard of his most famous creation, the word "scientist."
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Whewell wrote back to Faraday saying,
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"I would propose for the two elements resulting from electrolysis the terms 'anion' and 'cation.'
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And for the two together, you might use the term 'ions.'"
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And there's something interesting here, and I didn't pick up on it at first, but Whewell said,
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"The things resulting from electrolysis."
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Faraday, thought that the electric current is what produced the ions.
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What Arrhenius discovered, was that water simply dissolves certain substances, like salts,
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into their constituent ions, which themselves carry the charge.
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And since electrolytes carry electric charge, the higher the concentration of electrolytes
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in a solution the higher it's electrical conductivity.
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Arrhenius found that you can even reverse engineer your study of a solution
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and by measuring it's electrical conductivity, figure out how concentrated it is.
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Despite the importance of his work, Arrhenius' chemistry professors didn't think much of it
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and he got a mediocre grade, which is why it must have been particularly sweet
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when he won the Nobel prize in 1903 for that very same research.
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Today, we know a little bit more about how electrolytes work,
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and we've learned that the relationship between their concentration and their conductivity is not always straightforward,
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because not all electrolytes dissolve equally well in water.
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A strong electrolyte, for example, is one that dissociates, or breaks apart completely
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when dissolved in water and conducts electricity very well.
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Salts do this. So do strong acids like hydrochloric, and sulfuric, and nitric acid.
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As well as strong bases, like sodium and potassium hydroxide.
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Weak electrolytes only dissociate partially when dissolved in water, so they're only somewhat conductive.
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Most of the solute's molecules stay stuck together, remaining neutral.
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Acetic acid, the active ingredient in vinegar, and ammonium hydroxide are examples of this.
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And of course, some things dissolve in water but don't conduct electricity at all,
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because they don't dissociate into ions.
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Alcohol and sugar, for example, are nonelectrolytes.
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Now, what does any of this have to do with my laundry?
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Well, hydrogen peroxide is a polar molecule so it dissolves really well in water.
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But it's a very weak electrolyte.
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When it dissolves, it tends to dissociate into a water molecule and a lone oxygen ion.
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Since the dissolved peroxide creates even more water, the concentration of ions is quite low.
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But that lone oxygen ion is not happy by itself.
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It goes on an oxidizing rampage, swiping electrons from anything it can find.
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It's especially good at tearing up the tricky double bonds that tend to give laundry stains their color.
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When that rampaging ion destroys the double bond, the stain disappears.
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We're used to thinking of hydrogen peroxide as a fairly mild chemical,
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but that's because the over the counter stuff is pretty dilute.
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Too much peroxide could actually dissolve my clothes,
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and some of my favorite shirts are in here, so we need to dilute this stuff to make the solution the right strength.
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And as you might expect, if you joined me on my recent foray into stoichiometry,
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when chemists think about the strength of a solution, they think about moles.
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So before we can dilute this formula,
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first we have to figure out how many moles of solute, of hydrogen peroxide, we're working with here.
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You'll remember, I hope, that one mole of a compound equals 6.022 x 1023 molecules.
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That is a big number.
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So to make it easier on ourselves, we usually figure out how much a mole of a particular substance weighs.
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In our case, a mole of hydrogen peroxide weighs 34.014 grams.
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The number of moles of solute that are in a solution is known as it's molar concentration,
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that's also known as a solution's molarity.
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As a rule, molarity equals the number of moles of solute divided by liters of solution.
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So a one molar solution, contains one mole of solute per one liter of solution.
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Do not confuse this with another way of measuring concentrations based on mass,
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instead of based on volume.
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This is known as molality and it's expressed as the number of moles of a solute in a kilogram
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of a solution, rather than in a liter.
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Molality refers to moles per unit mass and molarity refers to moles per unit volume.
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Sorry, scientists are bad at naming things sometimes. You just have to remember this stuff.
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So now that we know what molarity is, let's figure out the molarity of this hydrogen peroxide solution.
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The label on the bottle says a 3% solution, weight per volume.
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Technically that's terrible chemistry because it's expressing a percentage in terms of two different sorts of units,
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but it does let us know how much solute went into the solution: 30 grams of H2O2 per one liter of water.
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I mean, just to be clear, it makes no sense to have a percentage with two different units
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and maybe these folks need to watch some Crash Course Chemistry.
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So to calculate the molarity of this solution we first need to figure out how many moles
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of hydrogen peroxide are in 30 grams of hydrogen peroxide.
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If we divide the 30 grams in the solution by it's molar mass of 34.014 grams per mole,
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we find that we have 0.88 moles of hydrogen peroxide per liter of solution.
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Or, so you get used to the lingo, a 0.88 molar solution of H2O2 in this little brown bottle.
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Now that we know the molarity of the original formula we can start thinking about how to dilute it.
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To dilute a solution you either have to add more solvent or reduce the amount of solute.
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Since I'm already starting with a solution, I need to add even more solvent, water,
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probably in this tub right here, so let's just get that out of there.
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And there's a handy chemical rule for understanding dilutions:
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the moles of solute before dilution is equal to the moles of solute after dilution.
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Think about it, the total amount of hydrogen peroxide is going to stay the same,
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no matter how much water it's diluted with.
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But as you dilute a solution, it's volume grows, the moles stay the same, and it's molarity thus shrinks.
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To calculate precisely how much one affects the other, we use a standard, and super simple, dilution equation.
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Here M1 & V1 are the molarity and volume of the original concentration, sometimes called the stock solution.
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In this case, it's what's in the bottle.
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M2 and V2 are the molarity and volume of the dilute solution.
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So in our case, M1 equals 0.88, that's the molarity of the hydrogen peroxide solutionthat we've got.
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And to bleach the stains out of laundry we need a 0.1 molar solution, that's M2, the molarity we want to get to.
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And the tub that I'll be soaking my whites in, holds 38 liters of liquid, so that's our V2.
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All that's missing is the volume of the peroxide solution that we must add to 38 liters of
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water to get to our target molarity.
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Do the math and you get V2 equalling 0.24 liters of hydrogen peroxide or 250 milliliters.
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And we just fill this right on up here, hopefully we have enough. Annnddd, that's what we need.
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And while I wait a few hours for the peroxide to do it's work,
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I'm going to enjoy another of my favorite aqueous solutions: tea.
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Today here at Crash Course Chemistry we learned about some of the properties of water that make it so special:
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it's polarity and it's dielectric property.
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We learned how electrolytes can be used to classify solutions.
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And we discovered how to calculate a solution's molarity, as well as how to dilute a solution using the dilution equation.
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This episode of Crash Course Chemistry was written by Kim Krieger.
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The script was edited by Blake de Pastino and myself, and our chemistry consultant is Dr. Heiko Langner.
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Our director, cinematographer and editor is Nicholas Jenkins.
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Script supervisor is Michael Aranda, who also is our sound designer.
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And our graphics team is Thought Cafe.