NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Chemistry Chapter 1 – Solutions (English Medium)
📘 Get NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Chemistry Chapter 1 – Solutions with accurate answers and step-by-step explanations in a clean, exam-friendly format. This chapter covers types of solutions (solid, liquid, gaseous), concentration terms (mass %, mole fraction, molarity, molality), solubility, Raoult’s law, colligative properties (ΔTb, ΔTf, osmotic pressure), van’t Hoff factor, and abnormal molar mass. Perfect for CBSE board exams and NEET/JEE practice. ✅
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👉 In a true solution, solute particles are extremely small (generally < 1 nm) and are uniformly distributed , so the mixture looks the same throughout.
✅ Types of solutions formed: 9 types (based on the physical state of solute and solvent).
So we get 3 solvent states (Gas, Liquid, Solid) × 3 solute states (Gas, Liquid, Solid) = 9 types .
👉 Example: Air (O2 + N2 + CO2 etc.)
👉 Example: Water vapour in air (humidity)
👉 Example: Smoke/dust in air, or camphor vapours in N2
👉 Example: CO2 dissolved in water (aerated drinks), O2 dissolved in water (needed by aquatic life)
👉 Example: Ethanol in water (alcohol + water mixture)
👉 Example: Sugar in water, NaCl in water (saline water, concentration often written as g/L or mol/L)
👉 Example: Hydrogen in palladium (H2 absorbed in Pd)
👉 Example: Amalgams like Na–Hg (sodium amalgam)
👉 Example: Alloys such as gold ornaments (Au mixed with Cu/Ag), brass (Cu + Zn)
✅ The concentration of a solution is commonly expressed as mol/L (molarity) , g/L , or % (w/v, v/v) depending on the need.
🤔 So, H2 (gas) gets uniformly distributed inside Pd (solid) , forming a gas-in-solid solution .
(i) Mole fraction
(ii) Molality
(iii) Molarity
(iv) Mass percentage
📌 Mole fraction is the ratio of moles of a component to the total moles of all components in the solution.
👉 For a binary solution (A + B):
• χA = nA / (nA + nB)
• χB = nB / (nA + nB)
✅ χA + χB = 1
🤔 Unit: No unit (dimensionless)
📌 Molality is the number of moles of solute present in 1 kg of solvent .
👉 Formula:
• m = (Moles of solute) / (Mass of solvent in kg)
• m = nsolute / wsolvent(kg)
✅ Unit: mol kg−1 (or mol/kg)
📌 Molarity is the number of moles of solute present in 1 litre (1 L) of solution .
👉 Formula:
• M = (Moles of solute) / (Volume of solution in L)
• M = nsolute / Vsolution(L)
✅ Unit: mol L−1 (or mol/L)
📌 Mass percentage of a component is the mass of that component in the solution divided by the total mass of solution, multiplied by 100 .
👉 For solute A in solvent B:
• Mass % (A) = [ wA / (wA + wB) ] × 100
✅ Unit: % (percentage)
📌 Mole fraction → compares moles with total moles (no unit)
📌 Molality → moles per kg of solvent (mol/kg), temperature independent
📌 Molarity → moles per L of solution (mol/L), changes with temperature (because volume changes)
📌 Mass % → compares mass with total mass (in %)
👉 Extra useful form (when masses are given):
• n = w(g) / M(g mol−1)
So molality can also be written as:
• m = wsolute(g) / [ Msolute(g mol−1) × wsolvent(kg) ]
✅ Mole fraction is super useful in topics like Raoult’s law and vapour pressure of solutions because it directly connects with gaseous behavior.
• 68% (w/w) HNO3 means 68 g HNO3 in 100 g solution
• Density (ρ) = 1.504 g mL−1
• Molar mass of HNO3 = (1) + (14) + (3 × 16) = 63 g mol−1
👉 n = w / M
n = 68 g / 63 g mol−1
n = 1.079 mol (approx)
👉 Volume = Mass / Density
V = 100 g / 1.504 g mL−1
V = 66.5 mL
Convert to litres:
66.5 mL = 0.0665 L
👉 M = n / V(L)
M = 1.079 mol / 0.0665 L
M = 16.23 mol L−1
✅ Therefore, Molarity = 16.23 mol L−1 (≈ 16.2 M )
👉 To convert % (w/w) → molarity , density is essential because volume changes with concentration.
📌 That’s why the same acid can have different molarity if its density (or temperature) changes.
• Molality (m) = 0.61 mol kg−1
• Mole fraction of glucose (χglucose) ≈ 0.01
• Mole fraction of water (χwater) ≈ 0.99
• Molarity (M) (given density 1.2 g mL−1 ) = 0.666 mol L−1 (≈ 0.67 M )
10% (w/w) glucose ⇒ 10 g glucose present in 100 g solution.
So water = 100 − 10 = 90 g
• Glucose = C6H12O6 ,
• molar mass = (6×12) + (12×1) + (6×16) = 180 g mol−1
• Water = H2O , molar mass = (2×1) + 16 = 18 g mol−1
• Density of solution = 1.2 g mL−1
👉 Molality = (moles of solute) / (mass of solvent in kg)
• Moles of glucose = 10 g / 180 g mol−1 = 0.0556 mol
• Mass of water = 90 g = 0.090 kg
So,
m = 0.0556 mol / 0.090 kg = 0.617 mol kg−1
✅ m ≈ 0.61 mol kg−1
👉 First find moles:
• nglucose = 10/180 = 0.0556 mol
• nwater = 90/18 = 5.00 mol
Total moles = 0.0556 + 5.00 = 5.0556 mol
✅ Mole fraction of glucose:
χglucose = 0.0556 / 5.0556 = 0.011 ≈ 0.01
✅ Mole fraction of water:
χwater = 5.00 / 5.0556 = 0.989 ≈ 0.99
(Or simply: χwater = 1 − χglucose )
🤔 We need volume of solution for 100 g solution .
👉 Volume = Mass / Density
V = 100 g / 1.2 g mL−1 = 83.33 mL = 0.08333 L
Now,
M = moles of glucose / volume of solution (L)
M = 0.0556 mol / 0.08333 L = 0.667 mol L−1
✅ M ≈ 0.666 mol L−1 (≈ 0.67 M )
✅ Molarity depends on volume of solution , so it can change with temperature (volume expands/contracts).
📌 That’s why density helps a lot when converting % w/w → molarity .
