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Consider two solutions made using water as the solvent: 1.0 m CaCl2 and 3.0 m sucrose. Describe how the osmotic pressures of these two solutions compare. Explain why this is true.

2 Answers

7 votes

The osmotic pressures of the two solutions are the same.

Both solutions contain the same number of dissolved particles in the same quantity of the same solvent.

Osmotic pressure is a colligative property.

Because it is a colligative property, osmotic pressure is influenced only by the number of dissolved particles, not by the identities of the particles.

answered
User NiklasMH
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7.7k points
5 votes
Osmotic pressure is calculated by the product of the concentration in molarity, the temperature, the vant Hoff factor (3 for CaCl2 and 1 for sucrose) and R, universal gas constant. At the same temperature, the osmotic pressures of both solutions are equal.

π = CRTi
For CaCl2,
π = (1)RT(3) = 3RT

For sucrose,
π = (3)RT(1) = 3RT
answered
User Libu Mathew
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8.7k points
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