Difference between diluting and adding

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the differences between diluting and adding water to a specific amount of NaOH. When diluting, the final volume is adjusted to 1.00 L after adding NaOH, while adding 1.00 L of water to NaOH may result in a total volume greater than 1.00 L due to the solid's volume. This distinction affects the final concentration of the solution, as molarity is defined by moles of solute per liter of solution. Participants express confusion over whether the final concentrations would be identical in both scenarios. Understanding the volume occupied by the solute is crucial for accurate solution preparation.
JessicaHelena
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Homework Statement


  1. Place 20.0 g NaOH(s) in a flask and dilute to 1.00 L with water.
  2. Place 20.0 g NaOH(s) in a flask and add 1.00 L of water.

How exactly do these two statements differ? Wouldn't adding 1.00L of water to 20.0g of NaOH dilute it anyways?

Homework Equations



none?

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]
The original question was this:
Which of the following methods correctly describes the preparation of 1.00 L of an aqueous solution of 0.500 M NaOH?

a. Place 0.500 g NaOH(s) in a flask and dilute to 1.00 L with water.
b. Place 0.500 g NaOH(s) in a flask and add 1.00 L of water.
c. Place 20.0 g NaOH(s) in a flask and dilute to 1.00 L with water.
d. Place 20.0 g NaOH(s) in a flask and add 1.00 L of water.
e. Place 40.0 g NaOH(s) in a flask and add 500 g of water.

I was able to narrow it down to c and d (the two statements above), but I'm not sure what's the difference between the two.
 
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Is the final concentration in both cases identical?
 
@Borek — I don't think I am told anything like that...

Concentration = mole / liters. In both cases I have 1L and 20g (which can easily be converted to moles by using the atomic molar mass), don't I?
 
The solid occupies a volume, or makes a difference to the volume of liquid that it dissolves in, so in which case do you know at the end exactly the g/L ?
 
@epenguin —I'm not sure if it should be obvious by now, but I'm not sure bc in both cases the solid is already in the flask (and so occupies volumes)?
 
OK In which case at the end of do you know exactly the volume of the solution?
 
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When you fill up to 1L - what volume do you end up with?

When you add something to 1 L of water - is the final volume 1 L, or not?
 
JessicaHelena said:

Homework Statement


  1. Place 20.0 g NaOH(s) in a flask and dilute to 1.00 L with water.
  2. Place 20.0 g NaOH(s) in a flask and add 1.00 L of water.

How exactly do these two statements differ? Wouldn't adding 1.00L of water to 20.0g of NaOH dilute it anyways?

Homework Equations



none?

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]
The original question was this:
Which of the following methods correctly describes the preparation of 1.00 L of an aqueous solution of 0.500 M NaOH?

a. Place 0.500 g NaOH(s) in a flask and dilute to 1.00 L with water.
b. Place 0.500 g NaOH(s) in a flask and add 1.00 L of water.
c. Place 20.0 g NaOH(s) in a flask and dilute to 1.00 L with water.
d. Place 20.0 g NaOH(s) in a flask and add 1.00 L of water.
e. Place 40.0 g NaOH(s) in a flask and add 500 g of water.

I was able to narrow it down to c and d (the two statements above), but I'm not sure what's the difference between the two.
By definition, Molarity is the No. of moles of solute per unit volume of solution (in L). What inference do you draw from it?
 
Think about:
What does "0.5 molar" mean?
For each possible answer, How much NaOH and how much solution do you end up with?

Edit: Strange! None of these replies were visible when |I posted. So I may be irrelevant.
 
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