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Mnemonics: The Amazing World of Solutes, Solvents, and Solutions

Nine Types of Solutions (Based on Physical States)

What needs to be memorized: There are 9 types of solutions based on combinations of solid, liquid, and gas states - Solid in Solid, Solid in Liquid, Solid in Gas, Liquid in Solid, Liquid in Liquid, Liquid in Gas, Gas in Solid, Gas in Liquid, Gas in Gas

The Desi Mnemonic: "SLG × SLG Matrix - Sabji, Lassi, Gas"

💡 How it works: Think of it as a 3×3 grid. Har solute (S, L, G) ko har solvent (S, L, G) mein mila do = 3 × 3 = 9 types!

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • Sabji (Solid solute) can be dissolved in:
    • Solid → Example: Alloys like brass
    • Liquid → Example: Salt in water
    • Gas → Example: Smoke (dust in air)
  • Lassi (Liquid solute) can be dissolved in:
    • Solid → Example: Mercury in gold amalgam
    • Liquid → Example: Alcohol in water
    • Gas → Example: Water vapor in air (humidity)
  • Gas (solute) can be dissolved in:
    • Solid → Example: Hydrogen in palladium
    • Liquid → Example: CO₂ in soda/cold drink
    • Gas → Example: Air (mixture of gases)

Three Types of Solutions Based on Concentration

What needs to be memorized: Unsaturated Solution, Saturated Solution, Supersaturated Solution (in increasing order of solute dissolved)

The Desi Mnemonic: "USS Submarine"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • UUnsaturated (can still dissolve more solute - like chai mein kam cheeni)
  • SSaturated (maximum dissolved at that temperature - perfect sweetness)
  • SSupersaturated (more than maximum, unstable - bahut zyada sweet, unstable)

💡 Memory Aid: Think of adding sugar to chai - first it's unsaturated (needs more), then saturated (just right), then supersaturated if you somehow force more sugar in (unstable!).

Factors Affecting Solubility

What needs to be memorized: Temperature, Pressure (for gases), Nature of solute and solvent

The Desi Mnemonic: "TPN - Remember TAPAN controls solubility"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • TaTemperature (heating usually increases solubility of solids; decreases for gases)
  • PPressure (mainly affects gases dissolving in liquids)
  • NNature of solute and solvent (polar dissolves polar, non-polar dissolves non-polar - "like dissolves like")

Five Key Properties of Solutions

What needs to be memorized: Homogeneous mixture, Transparent/Clear, No Tyndall effect, Particles don't settle down, Cannot be separated by filtration

The Desi Mnemonic: "Do HAI, Teen NAHI"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • Do (2) properties that HAI (exist):
    1. Homogeneous - uniform composition throughout (ek jaisa everywhere)
    2. Transparent/Clear - you can see through it
  • Teen (3) properties that NAHI (don't exist):
    1. Tyndall effect NAHI - light beam scatter nahi hota (unlike colloids)
    2. Settling NAHI - particles neeche settle nahi hote (unlike suspensions)
    3. Separation by filtration NAHI - filter paper se separate nahi kar sakte

💡 Remember: Solutions are so well-mixed that they behave perfectly - 2 good properties HAI, 3 problems NAHI!

Solute vs Solvent vs Solution

What needs to be memorized: The difference between solute (what dissolves), solvent (what does the dissolving), and solution (the final mixture)

The Desi Mnemonic: "Student-Teacher-Classroom analogy"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • Solute = Student (smaller quantity, the one that gets dissolved/learns, ghulne wala)
  • Solvent = Teacher (larger quantity, the one that does the dissolving/teaching, ghulane wala)
  • Solution = Classroom (the homogeneous mixture where both exist together uniformly)

💡 Remember: Just like students mix with teachers in a classroom to create a learning environment, solute mixes with solvent to form a solution! The solvent is always present in larger amount, just like there are more students than teachers (wait, that's backwards! 😄 - actually more solvent than solute, like more space in class than students!).

Example: Sugar (solute/student) + Water (solvent/teacher) = Sugar solution (classroom) ✓

Definition of Solubility

What needs to be memorized: Solubility is the MAXIMUM amount of solute that can dissolve in a GIVEN amount of solvent at a PARTICULAR temperature

The Desi Mnemonic: "MaGaPa Rule"

🔗 The Breakdown:

  • MaMaximum amount of solute
  • GaGiven amount of solvent
  • PaParticular temperature

💡 Complete definition: Solubility = Maximum solute in Gaven solvent at Particular temperature

Example: The solubility of salt is 36g per 100mL water at 20°C - meaning MAXIMUM 36g (Ma) can dissolve in GIVEN 100mL (Ga) at that PARTICULAR 20°C (Pa)!

The document Mnemonics: The Amazing World of Solutes, Solvents, and Solutions is a part of the Class 8 Course Science Curiosity Class 8 - New NCERT.
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