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Concentration of solution

A forms when a in a . The of a solution is a measure of how 'crowded' the solute particles are. The more concentrated the solution, the more particles it contains in a given .

Calculating concentration

The concentration of a solution can be calculated using:

  • the mass of solute in grams, g
  • the volume of solution (or solvent) in cubic decimetres, dm3

The units for concentration are also shown as g/dm3, but this means the same as g dm-3.

Example

8 g of sodium hydroxide is dissolved in 2 dm3 of water. Calculate the concentration of the sodium hydroxide solution formed.

concentration = \(\frac{\textup{mass~of~solute~in~g}}{\textup{volume~in~dm}^{3}}\)

concentration = \(\frac{8~\textup{g}}{2~\textup{dm}^{3}}\)

concentration = \(~4~\textup{g~dm}^{-3}\)

Volume units

Apparatus used to measure volumes is usually marked in cm3 or ml. Although these are different units, they describe the same volume. For example, 250 ml = 250 cm3.

Volumes used in concentration calculations must be in dm3, not in cm3 or ml. It is useful to know that 1 dm3 = 1000 cm3. This means:

  • divide by 1000 to convert from cm3 to dm3
  • multiply by 1000 to convert from dm3 to cm3

For example, 250 cm3 is 0.25 dm3 (250 梅 1000). It is often easiest to convert from cm3 to dm3 before continuing with a concentration calculation.

Question

100 cm3 of dilute hydrochloric acid contains 0.5 g of dissolved hydrogen chloride. Calculate the concentration of the acid in g dm-3.