AgCl Solubility: Highest in 0.020 M BaCl2 or KCl

  • Thread starter Thread starter confusedbyphysics
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Solubility
AI Thread Summary
AgCl is generally considered insoluble in water, but it does have slight solubility. The discussion revolves around determining which solution would have the highest solubility for AgCl among several options. The common ion effect indicates that solutions containing ions common to AgCl (Ag+ or Cl-) will reduce its solubility. Pure water, lacking any common ions, allows for the highest potential solubility of AgCl. Ultimately, pure water is identified as the correct choice for maximizing AgCl solubility.
confusedbyphysics
Messages
61
Reaction score
0
It's driving me crazy that I can't figure this out. I've read the section in the book like 5 times and its not helping at all...argh.. Here it is:

In which of the following aqueous solutions would you expect AgCl to have the highest solubility?

pure water
0.020 M BaCl2
0.015 NaCl
0.020 AgNO3
0.020 KCl

AgCl is generally insoluble in water so it can't be pure water. Ag is a metal ion, and my book says interaction with Lewis bases other than water can interact with the metal ion, and can dramatically affect the solubility of a metal salt like AgCl.The example they show in the book is AgCl(s) + 2NH3 ---> Ag(NH3)2 + Cl-.

I am completely confused. I guess AgNO3 just as a random guess and its wrong. I'm thinking the answer is probably .02 M BaCl2 or .02 KCl because they both have a higher concentration than the remaining .015 NaCl answer, but I don't know which to choose or why one would be right and not the other.There is another section in my book that talks about precipitation and the separation of ions. The books says when Q < Ksp, sold dissolves until Q=ksp, but I don't know how that would help me when I can't figure out Q because I don't have the numbers. Could someone please help me understand this, I'm so confused...
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I think you are making the problem more complicated than it really is.

Although we generally consider AgCl insoluble in water, that isn't exactly true. AgCl is slightly soluble in water, very, very slightly, so much so we usualy ignore it.

In all 5 possible choices, we assume, water is the solvent we are using, even in the solutions containing other salt solutes.
So which choice will most easily dissolve the AgCl?

The common ion effect tells us that if the solution already has a "common ion" dissolved in it, it will make other salts with that ion less soluble.
The two ions that AgCl will break up into would be Ag+ and Cl-. Out of the 5, 4 of the choices have common ions with AgCl (either the Silver+1 or the Chloride ion), thus we are left with pure water as the likely choice.
This would make sense since pure water (in theory) would have nothing else dissolved in it, no other ions, nothing that would prevent the AgCl from dissolve [other than its already very low solubility].
 
Thanks mrjeffy321, pure water did turn out to be the right answer. I see what I did wrong now (I definitely have a habit of making things harder than they should be, haha)..thanks again for your help
 
I don't get how to argue it. i can prove: evolution is the ability to adapt, whether it's progression or regression from some point of view, so if evolution is not constant then animal generations couldn`t stay alive for a big amount of time because when climate is changing this generations die. but they dont. so evolution is constant. but its not an argument, right? how to fing arguments when i only prove it.. analytically, i guess it called that (this is indirectly related to biology, im...
Back
Top