Submitted by Zalack t3_11x4f9t in askscience
cracksmack85 t1_jd4k75m wrote
Reply to comment by westernguy339 in Can a single atom be determined to be in any particular phase of matter? by Zalack
Semi-related question - when I took gen chem in college, if a solid was dissolved in a liquid it was always denoted as “aqueous” and we were told to treat it as a liquid, but it was never really clear to me whether that substance is a liquid or a solid. Can you explain the “aqueous” designation?
[deleted] t1_jd4mf0y wrote
Aqueous here means that the solution which constitutes a solvent and solute, has water as the chosen solvent.
Example being Sodium Chloride. Sodium Chloride (aq) simply means that you have a saline solution. The individual atoms of Sodium Chloride are dissolved in liquid water.
I wouldn't really call NaCl a liquid if you have NaCl (aq) because you're no longer dealing with pure NaCl. The aqueous solution is a liquid though.
This leads to an interesting question about solids that do not dissolve in a liquid. Here you're dealing with a type of colloid (effectively one phase suspended in another phase) And the dispersed compound does not have to be solid btw- it can be liquid (such as milk).
cdcformatc t1_jd5d0dx wrote
Liquid salt to me makes me think of molten salt heated past it's melting temperature, which is very different than an aqueous solution.
[deleted] t1_jdhsn4u wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_jd4uytf wrote
[removed]
Angdrambor t1_jd7y889 wrote
It gets even more fun when you look at materials like Ice or Steel, which have like a dozen solid phases each.
octonus t1_jd54mix wrote
We discuss states of matter in terms of how a molecule interacts with its neighbors. If the solvent is a liquid (water in the case of aqueous solution), all interactions that you would care about are liquid like. In the case of a solid solution ie. bronze they would be solid-like.
The key reason we note it as being a solution rather than a liquid is to point out that the neighbors a molecule interacts with are the solvent, rather than molecules of the same type.
RestlessARBIT3R t1_jd4n0l2 wrote
Aqueous just means that it’s dissolved in a liquid. Ionic things dissolved in a liquid get covered in water molecules because the water molecules are polar and the ions are charged. Non-ionic things dissolved in liquid are usually just polar and can form hydrogen bonds with the water molecules so that it looks like a single solution as opposed to when things don’t dissolve
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments