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Ionic Strength: Effects on Chemical Equilibria01:19

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The addition of an inert ionic compound increases the solubility of a sparingly soluble salt. For example, adding potassium nitrate to a saturated solution of calcium sulfate significantly enhances the solubility of calcium sulfate. Le Châtelier's principle cannot predict this shift in the equilibrium. Instead, this could be explained in terms of changes in the effective concentration of the ions in solution in the presence of added inert salt.
In this solution, the primary...
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The ionic strength of a solution is a quantitative way of expressing the total electrolyte concentration of a solution. This concept was first introduced in 1921 by two American physical chemists, Gilbert N. Lewis and Merle Randall, while describing the activity coefficient of strong electrolytes. During the calculation of ionic strength (I or μ), all the cations and anions are considered. However, the concentration (c) of an ion with a greater charge number (z) has a greater contribution...
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Chemical Equilibria: Redefining Equilibrium Constant01:20

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The effect of an inert salt on the solubility of a sparingly soluble salt is known as the salt effect. The degree of the salt effect varies with the ionic strength of the solution, which in turn depends on the activity of the species in the solution. The activity is expressed as the product of concentration and the activity coefficient of the species.
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The extended Debye-Hückel equation indicates that the activity coefficient of an ion in an aqueous solution at 25°C depends on three partially interdependent properties: the ionic strength of the solution, the charge of the ion, and the ion size. 
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The interionic forces of the strong electrolytes depend on the solvent's dielectric constant, which is the ability of a solvent to store electrical energy, based on its polarizability. and the solution's concentration. In high-dielectric solvents and in dilute solutions, weak electrostatic forces keep ions apart. However, in low-dielectric solvents or concentrated solutions, stronger interionic forces may cause ions to pair up as ionic doublets despite being fully ionized. The theory of strong...
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Electrolytes: van't Hoff Factor03:08

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Colligative Properties of Electrolytes
The colligative properties of a solution depend only on the number, not on the identity, of solute species dissolved. The concentration terms in the equations for various colligative properties (freezing point depression, boiling point elevation, osmotic pressure) pertain to all solute species present in the solution. Nonelectrolytes dissolve physically without dissociation or any other accompanying process. Each molecule that dissolves yields one...
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Dealing with Ionic Strength Changes in Chemical Kinetics, Including Extrapolation to Zero Ionic Strength.

Sarah Clifford1, Kevin de Berg1, Nichola McCann2

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The Journal of Physical Chemistry. A
|March 17, 2026
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study introduces a new method for determining intrinsic chemical reaction rate constants in aqueous solutions without using inert salts. The approach directly analyzes ionic strength and activity coefficient changes, simplifying experiments and yielding accurate results.

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Area of Science:

  • Chemical Kinetics
  • Solution Chemistry

Background:

  • Kinetic studies in aqueous solutions traditionally use inert salts to maintain constant ionic strength and activity coefficients.
  • Inert salts have limitations, including potential interference, cost, and an inability to truly maintain constant ionic strength.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop a novel method for determining intrinsic rate constants (k0) without inert salt addition.
  • To enable accurate kinetic measurements by directly incorporating ionic strength and activity coefficient variations into data analysis.

Main Methods:

  • Numerical integration of rate equations incorporating activity coefficient corrections (Debye-Hückel, Davies, SIT).
  • Application of the method to the Ni2+-oxalate reaction as a case study.
  • Conducting experiments at minimal ionic strength.

Main Results:

  • Successfully determined the intrinsic rate constant (k0) from a single experiment at minimal ionic strength.
  • Achieved consistent results with replicate measurements, yielding log(k0+) = 5.20 ± 0.02.
  • Demonstrated the elimination of inert salt interference and simplification of experimental procedures.

Conclusions:

  • The new method provides a generalizable framework for obtaining physically meaningful rate constants in aqueous solutions.
  • This approach overcomes the limitations associated with traditional inert salt use in kinetic studies.
  • It offers a more accurate and efficient way to study molecular chemical interactions.