Skip to content

Osmosis & Colligative Properties

Overview

  • Sodium Polyacrylate is used to demonstrate an osmosis-like effect, specifically in the context of diapers.

Purpose

To illustrate the flow of water attempts to even out concentration gradients.

Procedure

  1. Introduction:
  • Hold up a diaper and discuss its function.
  • Reveal that it contains sodium polyacrylate.
  1. Experiment Setup:
  • Use approximately 2 g of sodium polyacrylate with 50 mL of deionized (DI) water, then add another 50 mL of DI water.
  • Repeat with a fresh 2 g of sodium polyacrylate and a saturated salt solution.
  • Draw the structure of sodium polyacrylate for students to see, highlighting that sodium is trapped in the “cells.”
  1. Demonstration:
  • Take a few scoops of sodium polyacrylate into the bottom of a beaker and add water. Control the ratio to create a gel within seconds, allowing the beaker to be turned upside down.
  • Ask students why sodium polyacrylate absorbed the water.
  • Show an illustration of the swollen sodium polyacrylate.
  • Discuss how to extract the water by adding salt, which alters the concentration gradient.

Key Concepts

  • Hydrogels: Cross-linked polymers with hydrophilic groups, such as carboxylic acid groups, which are water-attracting.
  • Chemical Structure:
  • Sodium polyacrylate, also known as poly(sodium propenoate), is a long, randomly coiled polymer.
  • Removal of Na+ causes negative charges on oxide ions along the polymer chain to repel, leading to uncoiling. Water molecules are attracted to these charges via hydrogen bonding.
  • Sodium polyacrylate can absorb over five hundred times its weight in pure water, but less in salty water.

Diapers and Leakage

  • Diapers may leak due to pressure forcing water out of the polymer beads. Manufacturers increase cross-link density to mitigate this.
  • The presence of salts in urine complicates absorption. Sodium polyacrylate can’t absorb all the water when salt concentration is balanced both inside and outside the polymer.

Osmotic Pressure Experiment

  • Use a thistle tube with a membrane in a 2 L graduated cylinder next to the cabinet.

Additional Experiment

  1. Dialysis Tubing:
  • Fill one bag with 25% glucose and 2% starch; place it in a beaker with deionized water and KI/I2 solution.
  • Fill another bag with deionized water and iodine; place it in a beaker with a saturated salt solution and about 5 mL of starch solution.
  • Observe the flow of water and the iodine/starch complex formation.

Chemical Data Table

CompoundMass (g)Chemical FormulaFreezes at (°C)Kf (°C/m)
Acetic acid25.0C2H4O216.63.90
Benzoic acid2.44C7H6O2(to be determined)(to be determined)
Benzene5.55.12
Camphor179.839.7
Carbon disulfide−1123.8
Carbon tetrachloride−2330
Chloroform−63.54.68
Cyclohexane6.420.2
Ethanol−114.61.99
Ethyl ether−116.21.79
Naphthalene80.26.9
Phenol417.27
Water01.86

References

  • Website for Images: TutorNext (may be subject to copyright).
Leave a Reply