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The document discusses a lab experiment to determine the concentration of unknown sugar solutions by comparing them to known standards. The unknown solution E was found to have a concentration between 17.5g/L and 75.3g/L, closest to 75g/L, based on its similar light color to solution D.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views4 pages

Science

The document discusses a lab experiment to determine the concentration of unknown sugar solutions by comparing them to known standards. The unknown solution E was found to have a concentration between 17.5g/L and 75.3g/L, closest to 75g/L, based on its similar light color to solution D.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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‭Lab report‬

‭By Sam M. & Mackenzie C.‬

‭Introduction‬
‭ rinking sugary beve­rages every day can significantly impact your he­alth. Those who consume sugary‬
D
‭drinks daily face a 31% e­levated risk of death from he­art disease compared to people who drink le­ss than‬
‭one serving of a sugary drink per month. The­two key goals: first, to cre­ate and contrast the differe­nt‬
‭concentrations of sugar solutions. Meaning that the darker the color the higher the concentration.‬
‭Secondly, to determine the­unknown concentration of a solution. Upon concluding the pre-lab‬
‭calculations, solution A was re­vealed to be the­least concentrated at 1.75 grams of sugar. Solution D‬
‭followe­d with a concentration of 7.53 grams, then solution B at 12.4 grams, with solution C exhibiting the­‬
‭highest density at 21.5 grams of sugar.‬

‭Materials‬
‭●‬ ‭ patula‬
S
‭‬
● ‭Digital scale‬
‭●‬ ‭Rubber Stopper‬
‭●‬ ‭Volumetric flask (100 ml)‬
‭●‬ ‭Weighing boat‬
‭●‬ ‭Test tubes‬
‭●‬ ‭Sugar- drink powder‬
‭●‬ ‭Water‬
‭●‬ ‭Test tube rack‬

‭Procedure‬
‭Part A‬

‭Step 1‬‭: zero out the weighing boat on the digital‬‭scale,‬

‭Step 2‬‭: measure the required amount of sugar powder‬‭into the weighing boat using the provided spatula.‬

‭ tep 3‬‭: take the needed amount and pour it into the‬‭volumetric flask, then put some water in so we could‬
S
‭dissolve it before filling the flask up to the 100ml (about 3.38 oz) line‬

‭Step 4‬‭: close it with the rubber stopper and shake‬‭it until everything is fully dissolved.‬
‭Step 5‬‭: Then very carefully pour the mixture into a test tube and place it on the test tube rack.‬

‭ tep 6‬‭: discard the remaining liquid in the flask,‬‭and rinse it clean to be able to repeat all these steps over‬
S
‭again for solutions B, C, and D.‬

‭ tep 7‬‭: Once all that is finished, and all the different‬‭test tubes filled with the different mixtures, they are‬
S
‭placed in order from most concentrated to least concentrated.‬

‭Part B‬

‭Step 1‬‭: compare the given mixture E to all our prepared‬‭solution from part A‬

‭Step 2‬‭: figure out what its concentration may be in‬‭grams/liter (g/L)‬

‭RESULTS‬

‭SOLUTION‬ ‭MOST TO LEAST‬


‭CONCENTRATED BASED‬
‭ON COLOR‬

‭A‬ ‭5‬
‭B‬ ‭2‬
‭C‬ ‭1‬
‭D‬ ‭3‬
‭E‬ ‭4‬

‭OBSERVATIONS‬

‭SOLUTION‬ ‭WHAT WAS OBSERVED‬

‭A‬ ‭Very light shade of red‬

‭B‬ ‭Dark red‬

‭C‬ ‭Very dark red‬

‭D‬ ‭ ight red but darker then‬


L
‭solution E‬

‭E‬ ‭ ight red but darker then‬


L
‭solution A‬
‭Calculations‬

‭Solution A‬‭: prepare 100ml of a 1.75(m/v) solution‬‭using the given solute‬

‭1.‬‭75%‬ ‭𝑚‬
‭ 00‬‭𝑚𝑙‬
1
‭=‬ ‭100‬‭𝑚𝑙‬

‭𝑚‬ = ‭1.‬ ‭75‬‭𝑔‬

‭Solution B‬‭: prepare 100ml of a 124g/l solution using‬‭the given solute‬

‭1‬. ‭24‬‭𝑔‬‭/‬‭𝐿‬ × ‭0.‬ ‭1‬‭𝐿‬ = ‭12‬. ‭4‭𝑔


‬‬

‭Solution C‬‭: prepare 100ml of a 215 000-ppm solution‬‭using the given solute‬

‭𝑚𝑔‬
‭𝑝𝑝𝑚‬ = ‭𝐿‬

‭215‬‭‭0
‬ 00‬‭𝑚𝑔‬ ‭𝑚‬
‭1‬‭𝐿‬
‭=‬ ‭0‬.‭1‭𝐿‬ ‬

‭𝑚‬ = ‭21‬. ‭5‭𝑔


‬‬

‭ olution D‬‭: prepare 100ml of a 0.22 mol/L solution‬‭using the given solute. (assume that solute is 100%‬
S
‭sugar: C‬‭12‬‭H‭2‬ 2‬‭O‭1‬1‬‭)‬

‭144‬. ‭12‬ + ‭22‬. ‭22‬ + ‭176‬ = ‭342‬. ‭34‬

‭𝑚‬
‭0‬. ‭22‬‭𝑚𝑜𝑙‬‭/‬‭𝐿‬ = ‭0‬.‭1‭𝐿
‬‬

‭𝑚‬
‭𝑛‬ = ‭0.‬ ‭022‬‭𝑚𝑜𝑙‬ = ‭342‬.‭34‬‭𝑔‬‭/‬‭𝑚𝑜𝑙‬
‭‬→ ‭𝑚‬ = ‭7.‬ ‭53‬‭𝑔‬
‭Analysis‬
‭1‬.‭75‬‭𝑔‬
‭𝐶𝑜𝑛𝑐𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑟𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛‬‭‬‭𝐴‬ = ‭‬ ‭0.‬‭1‬‭𝐿‬
‭‬ = ‭‬‭17‬. ‭5‭𝑔
‬ ‭/‬ ‬‭𝐿‬

‭7.‬‭53‬‭𝑔‬
‭𝐶𝑜𝑛𝑐𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑟𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛‬‭‬‭𝐷‬ = ‭0‬.‭1‬‭𝐿‬
= ‭75‬. ‭3‭𝑔
‬ ‬‭/‬‭𝐿‬

‭ he color of E was darker than A and very close to D. One can assume that solution E was of a‬
T
‭concentration between 17.5g/L and 75.3g/L nearest to 75.3g/L‬

‭Conclusion‬
c‭ oncentration in chemistry simply describes the quantity of a material in a specific area. Concentration‬
‭can also be defined as the ratio of solute to solvent or total solution in a solution. Typically, concentration‬
‭is stated as mass per unit volume. The comparison of concentrations among solutions A to D revealed‬
‭their proximity to specific values. In this instance, the closest match was to solution D, situated between‬
‭solutions A and D. The analysis led to the determination that solution E exhibits a concentration between‬
‭17.5g/L and 75.3g/L but closer to 75g/L. The light color of E matched closely to the light color of‬
‭solution D, the light coloring was caused by the smaller amount of solute (koo-laid powder) dissolved‬
‭into the solvent (water) resulting in a low concentrated solution. Solution D has a low concentration‬
‭(75.3g/L) so solution E would have a closely related concentration.There was only one source of error‬
‭throughout this experiment and that was the fact that to put the test tubes in order from least to most‬
‭concentrated it involved using your eyes to differentiate between them which isn’t very specific or‬
‭precise. To get better and more accurate results they could have provided us with a spectrophotometer that‬
‭gives perfect and specific precision to the nearest decimal.‬

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