Calculate Molarity of Co^2+ in a solution

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To calculate the molarity of Co^2+ in Co(NO3)2 solutions, use the dilution factor, which is the ratio of the starting volume to the ending volume. For the first solution, no dilution occurs, so the molarity remains at 0.160M. For the second solution, diluting 12 mL to 16 mL results in a dilution factor of 0.75, lowering the molarity accordingly. The same calculation method applies to the other dilutions, where the molarity of Co^2+ will equal the molarity of Co(NO3)2 due to complete dissociation. Understanding the dilution process is essential for accurately determining the molarity in each case.
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Homework Statement


Calculate the molarity of the Co^2+ ion in each of the solutions 1-5. The new molarity is given by the molarity of the stock solution multiplied by the dilution factor.

Solution: Co(NO3)2

Original molarity: 0.160

Dilution #1: none
D#2: 12mL to 16mL
D#3: 8mL to 16mL
D#4: 4mL to 16mL
D#5: 2mL to 16mL

Please help I do not understand what I'm supposed to do. Thank you.
 
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Co(NO3)2 --> (Co)+2 + 2(NO3)-1

Look at the coefficients. Your molarity of Co(NO3)2 will be the same as the Co+2 ions.

Dilution Factor = Starting Volume/Ending Volume

For #1, if you are not diluting the solution, you are not adding water. Your molarity will not change.

For #2, you are starting with 12 mL of 0.160M Co(NO3)2. Diluting to 16 mL will lower your molarity. Your dilution factor would be 12/16, or 0.75. Multiply this by the old molarity to get your new molarity.

Correct me if I'm wrong!
 
Yes, that is what I thought as well, I just don't know what it meant by "Calculate the molarity of the Co^2+ ion in each of the solutions 1-5"

So the above statement just means to calculate the molarity of the Co(NO3)2 solution in each of the 5 diluted solutions?
 
Does it help: you have a 1M (mole/L) solution of CaCl2. CaCl2 is completely dissociated. That means solution contains 1M of Ca2+ and 2M of Cl-.

Please note when asking homework type questions you should follow the template, otherwise you risk your question will be deleted. That's in forum rules.
 
Try M1V1=M2V2 were m is your molarity and v is your volume. With the dilution factor you should be able to calculate your original and final volumes then plug them into get your other molarity.
 
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