Calculating concentration is an essential part of checking whether the solution has been prepared correctly. Concentration is a measure of the amount of solute present in a given quantity of solvent, which in laboratory settings is often expressed in molarity (M). Molarity is defined as the number of moles of solute per liter of solution.
To calculate the concentration or molarity of \(\mathrm{NaCl}\), first determine the moles of the solute. This is achieved by dividing the mass of \(\mathrm{NaCl}\) by its molar mass. For sodium chloride, the molar mass is \(58.44 \mathrm{g/mol}\). The calculation follows:\[\text{Moles of } \mathrm{NaCl} = \frac{116.886 \mathrm{g}}{58.44 \mathrm{g/mol}}\]
Once the moles are determined, the next step is calculating molarity using the formula:\[\text{Molarity (M)} = \frac{\text{moles of NaCl}}{\text{volume in liters}}\]For this case, the solution volume is \(1.00 \mathrm{L}\), simplifying our calculations:\[\text{Molarity} = \frac{\frac{116.886 \mathrm{g}}{58.44 \mathrm{g/mol}}}{1.00 \mathrm{L}}\]
- The concentration provides insight into whether the laboratory process achieves the intended chemical outcome.
- Constant verification by concentration calculations ensures that experimental runs maintain their integrity and repeatability.
Accurate concentration calculation is fundamental for anyone working in chemistry to validate whether the preparation was successful.