Question
Question: What would be the concentration of a solution made by diluting \[45.0mL\] of \[4.2M\]\[KOH\] to \[25...
What would be the concentration of a solution made by diluting 45.0mL of 4.2M$$$$KOH to 250mL?
Solution
Adding a solvent to a solution to reduce the strength of the solute is called dilution and the process of removing solvent from a solution in order to raise the concentration of the solute in the solution is called the concentration of solution.
Complete answer:
We use the following formula for calculating the dilution,
c1V1=c2V2
Where,
c1 is the concentration of the starting solution
c2 is the concentration of the final solution
V1 is the volume of the starting solution
V2 is the volume of the final solution
It is given that,
c1=4.2molL−1; V1=45.0mL and V2=250mL
That is, we need to find the value of c2.
By substituting the values to the equation, we get
c2=c1×V2V1
=4.2molL−1×250mL45.0mL
=0.76molL−1
So the value of c2=0.76molL−1
It shows that the concentration should be about 61 of the original (61×4.2=0.7) after growing the volume by a factor of about 6.
Additional information:
Dilution is the method of weakening or deconcentrating a solution. Serial dilutions are used in microbiology to reduce bacterial concentrations to a required concentration for a particular test method or to a concentration that is easier to count when plated to an agar plate.
Note:
Remember the formula c1V1=c2V2 for calculation. The dilution method maintains the volume of solute while increasing the total amount of solution, lowering the final concentration. A solution's concentration is a measurement of how much solute has dissolved in a given volume of solvent or solution. A concentrated solution is one in which the volume of dissolved solute is relatively high. A dilute solution is one in which the volume of dissolved solute is comparatively minimal.