Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2023

First exams 2025

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Molar Concentration (SL IB Chemistry)

Revision Note

Alexandra Brennan

Last updated

Molar Concentration

Volumes & concentrations of solutions

  • The concentration of a solution is the amount of solute dissolved in a solvent to make 1 dm3 of solution
    • The solute is the substance that dissolves in a solvent to form a solution
    • The solvent is often water

  • concentrated solution is a solution that has a high concentration of solute
  • dilute solution is a solution with a low concentration of solute
  • Concentration is usually expressed in one of three ways:
    • moles per unit volume
    • mass per unit volume
    • parts per million

Moles per unit volume

  • The formula for expressing concentration using moles is:

  • You must make sure you change cm3 to dm (by dividing by 1000)
  • The relationships can be expressed using this formula triangle:

Concentration moles formula triangle diagram

Concentration moles formula triangle diagram

To use the concentration formula triangle cover the one you want to find out about with your finger and follow the instructions

Worked example

Calculate the mass of sodium hydroxide, NaOH, required to prepare 250 cm3 of a 0.200 mol dm-3 solution.

Answer:

  • Step 1: Use the formula triangle to find the number of moles of NaOH needed

number of moles  = concentration (mol dm-3) x volume (dm3)  

n = 0.200 mol dm-3 x 0.250 dm3

n = 0.0500 mol

  • Step 2: Find the molar mass of NaOH

M = 22.99 + 16.00 + 1.01 = 40.00 g mol-1

  • Step 3: Calculate the mass required

mass = moles x molar mass

mass =  0.0500 mol x 40.00 g mol-1   = 2.00 g

Mass per unit volume

  • Sometimes it is more convenient to express concentration in terms of mass per unit volume
  • The formula is:

To change a concentration from mol dm-3 to g dm-3  

  • Multiply the moles of solute by its molar mass

mass of solute (g) = number of moles (mol) x molar mass (g mol-1)

Parts per million

  • When expressing extremely low concentrations a unit that can be used is parts per million or ppm
  • This is useful when giving the concentration of a pollutant in water or the air when the absolute amount is tiny compared to the volume of water or air
  • 1 ppm is defined as
    • A mass of 1 mg dissolved in 1 dm3 of water

  • Since 1 dm3 weighs 1 kg we can also say it is
    • A mass of 1 mg dissolved in 1 kg of water, or 10-3 g in 103 g which is the same as saying the concentration is 1 in 10or 1 in a million

Worked example

The concentration of chlorine in a swimming pool should between between 1 and 3 ppm. Calculate the maximum mass, in kg, of chlorine that should be present in an Olympic swimming pool of size 2.5 million litres.

Answer:

  • Step 1: calculate the total mass in mg assuming 3ppm(1 litre is the same as 1 dm3)

3 x 2.5 x 106 = 7.5 x 106 mg

  • Step 2: convert the mass into kilograms (1 mg = 10-6 kg)

7.5 x 106  x 10-6  kg = 7.5 kg

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Alexandra Brennan

Author: Alexandra Brennan

Expertise: Chemistry

Alex studied Biochemistry at Newcastle University before embarking upon a career in teaching. With nearly 10 years of teaching experience, Alex has had several roles including Chemistry/Science Teacher, Head of Science and Examiner for AQA and Edexcel. Alex’s passion for creating engaging content that enables students to succeed in exams drove her to pursue a career outside of the classroom at SME.