This MCQ module is based on: Solutions — Exercises
Solutions — Exercises
Chapter 9 — Summary
In this chapter we explored how two or more substances can mingle so smoothly that they look like a single substance. We met solutes, solvents, looked at the many faces of solutions, and learnt how to tell a true solution apart from a colloid or a suspension.
Solution
A homogeneous mixture of two or more substances. Always = solute + solvent.
Solute & Solvent
Solute is the substance that dissolves; solvent is the one that does the dissolving (usually in larger amount).
Types of Solutions
Can be gas-gas (air), gas-liquid (cola), liquid-liquid (vinegar), solid-liquid (salt water), solid-solid (brass) and more.
Miscible / Immiscible
Liquids that mix freely (water + alcohol) vs those that stay in layers (oil + water).
Solubility
Max solute that dissolves in 100 g of solvent at a given temperature.
Saturation
Unsaturated (less) → Saturated (max) → Supersaturated (more than max; unstable).
Factors
Nature of solute-solvent, Temperature (solids ↑ with T, gases ↓ with T), Pressure (gases only).
Concentration
Dilute vs concentrated. Mass % = (mass solute / mass solution) × 100.
Universal Solvent
Water dissolves more substances than any other liquid because it is polar.
Solution vs Colloid vs Suspension
Distinguished by particle size, clarity, settling and Tyndall effect.
Tyndall Effect
Scattering of light by colloidal particles — makes a torch beam visible through milk, fog or smoke.
Everyday Examples
Sea water, lemonade, air, brass, cola, milk, fog, muddy water — every mixture tells a story.
Key Terms (Keyword Grid)
NCERT-Style Exercises
Try each question on your own first, then click Show Solution to check.
Q1. Fill in the blanks: (a) A mixture of two miscible liquids is a ______ solution. (b) Air is mainly a solution of oxygen in ______. (c) Solubility of a gas in water ______ with rise in temperature. (d) Water is called the ______ solvent.
Q2. Classify the following mixtures as true solution, colloid or suspension: (i) sugar in water, (ii) milk, (iii) chalk in water, (iv) air, (v) fog, (vi) muddy river water, (vii) brass.
Q3. Identify solute and solvent in each: (a) Iodine tincture, (b) Sugar syrup, (c) Aerated water (soda), (d) Brass, (e) Air.
- (a) Iodine (solute) in alcohol (solvent).
- (b) Sugar (solute) in water (solvent).
- (c) Carbon dioxide gas (solute) in water (solvent).
- (d) Zinc (solute) in copper (solvent) — copper is the major metal.
- (e) Oxygen + other gases (solutes) in nitrogen (solvent).
Q4. 15 g of common salt is dissolved in 135 g of water. Calculate the mass percentage of salt in the solution.
Q5. The solubility of potassium nitrate at 30 °C is 45 g per 100 g of water. Rahul dissolves 60 g of KNO3 in 100 g of water at 30 °C. (a) How much will dissolve? (b) How much remains undissolved? (c) Is the resulting solution saturated?
Q6. Why does a bottle of cola fizz more when opened on a warm day than on a cold day?
Q7. Define the Tyndall effect and give two everyday examples.
Q8. Differentiate between true solution, colloid and suspension in tabular form (any four points).
| Property | True Solution | Colloid | Suspension |
|---|---|---|---|
| Particle size | < 1 nm | 1–1000 nm | > 1000 nm |
| Appearance | Clear | Translucent | Opaque / turbid |
| Settling on standing | Never | Rarely | Settles |
| Tyndall effect | No | Yes | Particles visible |
| Example | Salt water | Milk | Muddy water |
Q9. Why is water called the "universal solvent"? Mention two substances that it cannot dissolve.
Q10. Explain, with particle-level reasoning, why ice added to a glass of hot water melts very rapidly.
Q11. State whether true or false. Correct the false ones. (a) A supersaturated solution is very stable. (b) Air is a homogeneous mixture. (c) Pressure strongly affects the solubility of solids in water. (d) The Tyndall effect is shown by true solutions.
- (a) False. Supersaturated solutions are unstable — a slight disturbance makes the extra solute crystallise out.
- (b) True. Air has the same composition in every puff — it is a gas-in-gas solution.
- (c) False. Pressure has a negligible effect on solids and liquids; it mainly affects the solubility of gases in liquids.
- (d) False. The Tyndall effect is shown by colloids, not true solutions — particles in true solutions are too small to scatter light.
Q12. A student prepares three salt-water samples: (A) 10 g in 200 g water, (B) 10 g in 100 g water, (C) 20 g in 100 g water. Arrange them in order of increasing concentration and calculate their mass percentages.
- A: mass of solution = 210 g; mass % = (10/210) × 100 ≈ 4.76%.
- B: mass of solution = 110 g; mass % = (10/110) × 100 ≈ 9.09%.
- C: mass of solution = 120 g; mass % = (20/120) × 100 ≈ 16.67%.