Chemistry
Chemistry
4th Edition
ISBN: 9780078021527
Author: Julia Burdge
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 13, Problem 139AP

Lysozyme is an enzyme that cleaves bacterial cell walls. A sample of lysozyme extracted from egg white has a molar mass of 13,930 g. A quantity of 0.100 g of this enzyme is dissolved in 150 g of water at 25°C . Calculate the vapor-pressure lowering, the depression in freezing point, the elevation in boiling point, and the osmotic pressure of this solution. (The vapor pressure of water at 25°C is 23.76 mmHg.)

Expert Solution & Answer
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Interpretation Introduction

Interpretation:

The vapor pressure lowering, depression in freezing point, elevation in boiling point, and atmospheric pressure of the solution are to be calculated with given molar mass of enzyme.

Concept Introduction:

The property that depends on the concentration of solute molecules and not on the identity of solute is termed as colligative property.

The four colligative properties of solution are vapor-pressure lowering, boiling point elevation, freezing point depression, and osmotic pressure.

Vapor pressure lowering is directly proportional to the mole fraction of the solute.

The pressure exerted by a solvent is equal to the product of that solvent’s mole fraction and the pressure exerted by the pure solvent. It is expressed as

P1=χ1P1

Here, P1 is the vapor pressure of the pure solvent, P1 is the pressure exerted by a solvent over a solution, and χ1 is the mole fraction of the solvent.

Freezing point depression occurs when a nonvolatile solute is added to a solvent.

Freezing point depression is calculated by using the expression given below:

ΔT=Kf.m

Here, Kf is the freezing point constant and m is the molality.

Elevation in boiling point occurs when a nonvolatile solute is added to a pure solvent.

Boiling point elevation is calculated by using the expression given below:

ΔT=Kb.m

Here, Kb is the boiling point constant and m is the molality.

Osmotic pressure is the pressure that has to be applied to prevent the pure solvent to pass to a solution by osmosis.

The osmotic pressure is calculated by using the expression given below:

π=MRT

Here, π is the osmotic pressure, M is the molarity, R is the gas constant and T is the temperature.

The number of moles is calculated by dividing the given mass of the compound by the molar mass. It is expressed as

M=mn

Here, M is the molar mass, m is the given mass and n is the number of moles.

The mole fraction of compound can be calculated as

χA=nAnA+nB

Answer to Problem 139AP

Solution: 2.05×105 mmHg, 8.90×105C, 2.50×105C and 0.889 mmHg.

Explanation of Solution

Given information: Molar mass of the enzyme is 23930 g/mol.

Mass of enzyme is 0.100 g.

Mass of water is 150 g.

Temperature is 25C or 298 K.

Vapor pressure of pure water is 23.76 mmHg.

Calculate the number of moles of lysozyme by dividing the given mass of enzyme with the molar mass of the enzyme. It is calculated as

nlysozyme=mlysozymeMlysozyme=0.100 g13930 g/mol=7.18×106 mol

Calculate the number of moles of water by dividing the given mass of water with the molar mass of water. It is calculated as

nwater=mwaterMwater=150 g18.02 g/mol=8.32 mol

Calculate the mole fraction of lysozyme as

χlysozyme=nlysozymenlysozyme+nwater=7.18×106 mol(7.18×106 mol)+8.32 mol=8.63×107

The lowering in vapor pressure is calculated as follows by using the expression given below:

ΔP=χlysozymePwater

Substitute the values of mole fraction and vapor pressure of water

ΔP=(8.63×107)(23.76 mmHg)=2.05×105 mmHg

Freezing point depression is calculated by using the expression given below:

ΔT=Kf.m

Here, Kf is the freezing point constant and m is the molality.

Substitute the required values

ΔT=(1.86C/m)(7.18×1060.150 kg)=8.90×105C

Boiling point elevation is calculated by using the expression given below:

ΔT=Kb.m

Here, Kb is the boiling point constant and m is the molality.

Substitute the required values

ΔT=(0.52C/m)(7.18×106 mol0.150 kg)=2.50×105C

Calculate the osmotic pressure by using the expression given below:

π=MRT

Here, π is the osmotic pressure, M is the molarity, R is the gas constant, and T is the temperature.

Assuming the density of solution is 1.00 g/mL, substitute 7.18×106 mol0.150 L for M,  0.0821 L.atm.mol-1.K-1 for R, and 298 K for T

π=(7.18×106 mol0.150 L)(0.0821Latm/molK)(298K)=1.17×103atm=0.889 mmHg

Conclusion

The vapor pressure lowering, depression in freezing point, elevation in boiling point, and atmospheric pressure of the solution are 2.05×105 mmHg, 8.90×105°C, 2.50×105°C, and 0.889 mmHg, respectively.

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Chapter 13 Solutions

Chemistry

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