This MCQ module is based on: Concentration, Suspensions and Colloids
Concentration, Suspensions and Colloids
9.7 How Strong? — Concentration of a Solution
Two glasses of lemonade look alike — but one may be gentle and the other fiercely tangy. They differ in concentration.
(a) Dilute vs Concentrated
If you dissolve half a spoon of sugar in a glass of water, it is a dilute solution. Add ten spoons and it becomes concentrated. These words are relative — they compare two solutions rather than give a fixed measurement.
(b) Mass Percentage
To put a number on concentration, chemists use a formula:
Example: If 10 g of sugar is dissolved in 90 g of water, the mass of the solution is 10 + 90 = 100 g. Mass % of sugar = (10 / 100) × 100 = 10%.
(c) A quick mention of mole percentage
In higher classes you will meet mole percent, which counts the number of particles of solute and solvent rather than their mass. For now, remember that it is another way of expressing concentration by particle count instead of by mass.
9.8 Why Water is Called the "Universal Solvent"
Look around: tea, soft drinks, medicines, our blood, sea water, rain water — they are all water-based solutions. Water dissolves more substances than any other liquid on Earth. This is because water molecules are polar — one end slightly positive, the other slightly negative — so they grip both positive and negative parts of many solutes and pull them apart.
Because water is such an efficient solvent, rivers carry dissolved minerals to the sea, blood carries dissolved nutrients and oxygen through our body, and plants drink up dissolved nitrates from soil. Life as we know it would simply not exist without water's dissolving power.
9.9 Solution, Suspension and Colloid
Not every mixture is a true solution. Compare three glasses:
| Property | True Solution | Colloid | Suspension |
|---|---|---|---|
| Particle size | < 1 nm | 1–1000 nm | > 1000 nm (visible) |
| Appearance | Clear, transparent | Translucent, slightly cloudy | Turbid, opaque |
| Settling | Never | Very slow or never | Settles on standing |
| Filter paper | Passes through | Passes through | Retained on paper |
| Tyndall effect | No | Yes (scatters light) | Yes, but particles visible |
| Examples | Salt water, sugar water, air | Milk, fog, smoke, toothpaste, blood | Muddy water, chalk-water, paint |
The Tyndall Effect
Shine a torch through a glass of salt water — the beam is invisible inside the liquid. Shine the same torch through a glass of milky water — the beam glows as a bright line! Colloidal particles are large enough to scatter light. This scattering is called the Tyndall effect, named after John Tyndall. You see the same effect when sunbeams stream through trees on a foggy morning, or through dusty air in a dark room.
You need: 3 clean glasses, water, salt, a little milk, a pinch of soil, a small torch, a dark room.
- Glass A: dissolve a spoon of salt in water and stir till clear.
- Glass B: add a few drops of milk to water and stir.
- Glass C: add a pinch of garden soil to water and stir well; let it stand 1 minute.
- Darken the room. Shine a torch through each glass horizontally and look at the beam from the side.
What you should see:
- Glass A (salt water) — no visible beam. Light passes through without scattering. This is a true solution.
- Glass B (milk + water) — a clear bright line of light inside the liquid. The milk particles scatter light — this is a colloid.
- Glass C (muddy water) — the beam is partly blocked; you can also see soil particles and a layer settling at the bottom. This is a suspension.
Why? True-solution particles are too tiny (~atomic size) to scatter visible light. Colloid particles are just big enough to bounce light in all directions, making the beam glow. Suspension particles are even larger — they settle and block light.
🧠 Competency-Based Questions
Q1. L1 Remember Write the formula for mass percentage of a solute.
Q2. L2 Understand Calculate the mass % of a solution made by dissolving 20 g of salt in 80 g of water.
Q3. L3 Apply Meera sees fog glowing around a street lamp at dawn. Which property of which type of mixture does this demonstrate?
Q4. L4 Analyse Why is water called the universal solvent, even though it cannot dissolve oil or wax?
Q5. L5 Evaluate Meera says milk is a "true solution" because it looks uniform. Do you agree? Defend your answer using two pieces of evidence.
🔗 Assertion–Reason Questions
Assertion (A): Water is called the universal solvent.
Reason (R): Water is a polar molecule that can pull apart many ionic and polar solutes.
Assertion (A): Muddy water is a colloid.
Reason (R): The particles in muddy water are large enough to be seen and will settle down on standing.
Assertion (A): A torch beam is visible when passed through milk but invisible when passed through salt water.
Reason (R): Milk is a colloid whose particles scatter light (Tyndall effect), while salt water is a true solution whose particles are too small to scatter light.