cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
NOM4DCAL
New Contributor

Disassociation of ionic compound in a solution

I am trying to understand what kind of experiments have been preformed which have led us to the conclusion that ionic compounds like NaCl in something like water disassociate. From my understanding of the term disassociate this means to no longer be together or to be separate. So I wonder if this was the case how are saltwater purifiers working how is it that salt water purifiers do not sometimes pull more Na+ then Cl-. Maybe we are being taught using incorrect verbiage. Like not that they are completely dissociating but instead like we already teach ionic bonds are not particularly strong bonds and thus are easily persuaded to form other compounds which have stronger bonds. I am asking because I cannot seem to get a straight answer from any of my professors on the subject. A thought experiment I often ask them when they are adamant that they truly are dissociated is if we took 100mL’s of a solution of aqueous NaCl ( about 10% salt by volume) then take a syringe of 10mL’s of the solution and tested how much Na+ and Cl- was in the 10ml syringe there would still be 10% NaCl in the syringe so how can we say that the compound has dissociated? Is there some magic happening that causes them to be present in the same amount every time or is there still a bond between them?

1 Reply
jacobjohnsons1
New Contributor

Re: Disassociation of ionic compound in a solution

Your question touches on an important nuance of ionic dissociation. When NaCl dissolves in water, it doesn't fully break into isolated Na+ and Cl- ions in a way we might expect in other reactions. Instead, it dissociates into free ions, but they're still influenced by the water’s structure. They don't form bonds with each other again unless certain conditions (like evaporation or crystal formation) occur. In saltwater purifiers, the ions remain separate but interact with the filtration process, which usually targets specific ions. So, it’s not a "magic" scenario, but a dynamic equilibrium of ions that can still be measured in a solution as Na+ and Cl- in roughly equal concentrations, since they’re continually separating and associating, influenced by the surrounding environment Read more.

0 Kudos