you mean NaCl + H2O -> H2O + Na+ + Cl-Could someone explain simply what happens when salt is dissolved in water? Like in steps, from 'putting the salt in the water' to having it fully dissolved?
Thanks
Nope, ignorance. I remember this in chemistry many years ago, but I still don't really know what it means. What exactly happens?
The "why it happens" of solvation depends pretty much on the second law of thermodynamics.
An excellent description, but note that the water will be attracted to the sodium ions while they are still part of the crystal; the cations won't "break free", they will be pulled off by the water molecules.Now consider the crystal surrounded by water. When the sodium atom breaks free, leaving a hole. The positively charged sodium ion will quickly be surrounded by the partially negative oxygen ends of water molecules. The sodium ion is now solvated, it doesn't fit back into the hole it left behind and floats off into solution.
Wait! There really is a second law of thermodynamics? I thought that was just something christians made up to disprove evolution!
An excellent description, but note that the water will be attracted to the sodium ions while they are still part of the crystal; the cations won't "break free", they will be pulled off by the water molecules.
An excellent description, but note that the water will be attracted to the sodium ions while they are still part of the crystal; the cations won't "break free", they will be pulled off by the water molecules.
Six of one, half a dozen of the other.
If there isn't sufficient thermal energy to break the Na-Cl bonds, all you get is a water molecule adsorbed onto the surface of a salt crystal.
ETA.
Unless you're suggesting that adsorption of water onto a salt crystal weakens the surrounding bonds, making it more likely that the atom will leave the surface and solvate. But I think that's getting a little outside the scope of the OP![]()
Only briefly- the water molecules are only weakly attached, and are constantly popping off and on for most cations. The exceptions would be Co3+ and Cr3+ ions, which are extremely slow to replace their water molecules (and other ligands).Does the Na or Cl ion stay attached to the water molecule it "leaves" with.
The "what happens" of dissolution is fairly simple.
Excelent explanation for the layman. Thanks.
you mean NaCl + H2O -> H2O + Na+ + Cl-
If you read the rest of this thread, let me ask you - why do you think it doesn't?To clear up my own ignorance about chemistry (let's not discuss my grades in that course, ok?), given how wonderfully Na behaves when you drop it in water, why does the sodium not now interact with all that water? Is it because it is an ion?
Yes- it's because it's an ion. Sodium is much more stable as the ion than as the metal, so the metal will react with very many things in order to form the ion. Once it's the ion, it doesn't do very much at all...given how wonderfully Na behaves when you drop it in water, why does the sodium not now interact with all that water? Is it because it is an ion?