Solubility
Solubility
Main page
2306386

Solubility

logo
Community Hub0 subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Example of a dissolved solid (left)
Formation of crystals in a 4.2 M ammonium sulfate solution. The solution was initially prepared at 20 °C and then stored for 2 days at 4 °C.

In chemistry, solubility is the ability of a substance, the solute, to form a solution with another substance, the solvent. Insolubility is the opposite property, the inability of the solute to form such a solution.

The extent of the solubility of a substance in a specific solvent is generally measured as the concentration of the solute in a saturated solution, one in which no more solute can be dissolved.[1] At this point, the two substances are said to be at the solubility equilibrium. For some solutes and solvents, there may be no such limit, in which case the two substances are said to be "miscible in all proportions" (or just "miscible").[2]

The solute can be a solid, a liquid, or a gas, while the solvent is usually solid or liquid. Both may be pure substances, or may themselves be solutions. Gases are always miscible in all proportions, except in very extreme situations,[3] and a solid or liquid can be "dissolved" in a gas only by passing into the gaseous state first.

The solubility mainly depends on the composition of solute and solvent (including their pH and the presence of other dissolved substances) as well as on temperature and pressure. The dependency can often be explained in terms of interactions between the particles (atoms, molecules, or ions) of the two substances, and of thermodynamic concepts such as enthalpy and entropy.

Under certain conditions, the concentration of the solute can exceed its usual solubility limit. The result is a supersaturated solution, which is metastable and will rapidly exclude the excess solute if a suitable nucleation site appears.[4]

The concept of solubility does not apply when there is an irreversible chemical reaction between the two substances, such as the reaction of calcium hydroxide with hydrochloric acid; even though one might say, informally, that one "dissolved" the other. The solubility is also not the same as the rate of solution, which is how fast a solid solute dissolves in a liquid solvent. This property depends on many other variables, such as the physical form of the two substances and the manner and intensity of mixing.

The concept and measure of solubility are extremely important in many sciences besides chemistry, such as geology, biology, physics, and oceanography, as well as in engineering, medicine, agriculture, and even in non-technical activities like painting, cleaning, cooking, and brewing. Most chemical reactions of scientific, industrial, or practical interest only happen after the reagents have been dissolved in a suitable solvent. Water is by far the most common such solvent.

The term "soluble" is sometimes used for materials that can form colloidal suspensions of very fine solid particles in a liquid.[5] The quantitative solubility of such substances is generally not well-defined, however.

Quantification of solubility

[edit]

The solubility of a specific solute in a specific solvent is generally expressed as the concentration of a saturated solution of the two.[1] Any of the several ways of expressing concentration of solutions can be used, such as the mass, volume, or amount in moles of the solute for a specific mass, volume, or mole amount of the solvent or of the solution.

Per quantity of solvent

[edit]

In particular, chemical handbooks often express the solubility as grams of solute per 100 millilitres of solvent (g/(100 mL), often written as g/100 ml), or as grams of solute per decilitre of solvent (g/dL); or, less commonly, as grams of solute per litre of solvent (g/L). The quantity of solvent can instead be expressed in mass, as grams of solute per 100 grams of solvent (g/(100 g), often written as g/100 g), or as grams of solute per kilogram of solvent (g/kg). The number may be expressed as a percentage in this case, and the abbreviation "w/w" may be used to indicate "weight per weight".[6] (The values in g/L and g/kg are similar for water, but that may not be the case for other solvents.)

Alternatively, the solubility of a solute can be expressed in moles instead of mass. For example, if the quantity of solvent is given in kilograms, the value is the molality of the solution (mol/kg).

Per quantity of solution

[edit]

The solubility of a substance in a liquid may also be expressed as the quantity of solute per quantity of solution, rather than of solvent. For example, following the common practice in titration, it may be expressed as moles of solute per litre of solution (mol/L), the molarity of the latter.

In more specialized contexts the solubility may be given by the mole fraction (moles of solute per total moles of solute plus solvent) or by the mass fraction at equilibrium (mass of solute per mass of solute plus solvent). Both are dimensionless numbers between 0 and 1 which may be expressed as percentages (%).

Liquid and gaseous solutes

[edit]

For solutions of liquids or gases in liquids, the quantities of both substances may be given volume rather than mass or mole amount; such as litre of solute per litre of solvent, or litre of solute per litre of solution. The value may be given as a percentage, and the abbreviation "v/v" for "volume per volume" may be used to indicate this choice.

Conversion of solubility values

[edit]

Conversion between these various ways of measuring solubility may not be trivial, since it may require knowing the density of the solution — which is often not measured, and cannot be predicted. While the total mass is conserved by dissolution, the final volume may be different from both the volume of the solvent and the sum of the two volumes.[7]

Moreover, many solids (such as acids and salts) will dissociate in non-trivial ways when dissolved; conversely, the solvent may form coordination complexes with the molecules or ions of the solute. In those cases, the sum of the moles of molecules of solute and solvent is not really the total moles of independent particles solution. To sidestep that problem, the solubility per mole of solution is usually computed and quoted as if the solute does not dissociate or form complexes—that is, by pretending that the mole amount of solution is the sum of the mole amounts of the two substances.

Qualifiers used to describe extent of solubility

[edit]

The extent of solubility ranges widely, from infinitely soluble (without limit, i.e. miscible[2]) such as ethanol in water, to essentially insoluble, such as titanium dioxide in water. A number of other descriptive terms are also used to qualify the extent of solubility for a given application. For example, U.S. Pharmacopoeia gives the following terms, according to the mass msv of solvent required to dissolve one unit of mass msu of solute:[8] (The solubilities of the examples are approximate, for water at 20–25 °C.)

Term Range (msv/msu) Example g/dL msv/msu
Very soluble <1 calcium nitrate 158.7 0.63
Freely soluble 1 to 10 calcium chloride 65 1.54
Soluble 10 to 30 sodium oxalate 3.9 26
Sparingly soluble 30 to 100
Slightly soluble 100 to 1000 calcium sulfate 0.21 490
Very slightly soluble 1000 to 10,000 dicalcium phosphate 0.02 5000
Practically insoluble or insoluble ≥ 10,000 barium sulfate 0.000245 409000

The thresholds to describe something as insoluble, or similar terms, may depend on the application. For example, one source states that substances are described as "insoluble" when their solubility is less than 0.1 g per 100 mL of solvent.[9]

Molecular view

[edit]

Solubility occurs under dynamic equilibrium, which means that solubility results from the simultaneous and opposing processes of dissolution and phase joining (e.g. precipitation of solids). A stable state of the solubility equilibrium occurs when the rates of dissolution and re-joining are equal, meaning the relative amounts of dissolved and non-dissolved materials are equal. If the solvent is removed, all of the substance that had dissolved is recovered.

The term solubility is also used in some fields where the solute is altered by solvolysis. For example, many metals and their oxides are said to be "soluble in hydrochloric acid", although in fact the aqueous acid irreversibly degrades the solid to give soluble products. Most ionic solids dissociate when dissolved in polar solvents. In those cases where the solute is not recovered upon evaporation of the solvent, the process is referred to as solvolysis. The thermodynamic concept of solubility does not apply straightforwardly to solvolysis.

When a solute dissolves, it may form several species in the solution. For example, an aqueous solution of cobalt(II) chloride can afford [Co(H2O)6]2+, [CoCl(H2O)5]+, CoCl2(H2O)2, each of which interconverts.

Factors affecting solubility

[edit]

Solubility is defined for specific phases. For example, the solubility of aragonite and calcite in water are expected to differ, even though they are both polymorphs of calcium carbonate and have the same chemical formula.[clarification needed]

The solubility of one substance in another is determined by the balance of intermolecular forces between the solvent and solute, and the entropy change that accompanies the solvation. Factors such as temperature and pressure will alter this balance, thus changing the solubility.

Solubility may also strongly depend on the presence of other species dissolved in the solvent, for example, complex-forming anions (ligands) in liquids. Solubility will also depend on the excess or deficiency of a common ion in the solution[clarification needed], a phenomenon known as the common-ion effect. To a lesser extent, solubility will depend on the ionic strength of solutions. The last two effects can be quantified using the equation for solubility equilibrium.

For a solid that dissolves in a redox reaction, solubility is expected to depend on the potential (within the range of potentials under which the solid remains the thermodynamically stable phase). For example, solubility of gold in high-temperature water is observed to be almost an order of magnitude higher (i.e. about ten times higher) when the redox potential is controlled using a highly oxidizing Fe3O4-Fe2O3 redox buffer than with a moderately oxidizing Ni-NiO buffer.[10]

Solubility (metastable, at concentrations approaching saturation) also depends on the physical size of the crystal or droplet of solute (or, strictly speaking, on the specific surface area or molar surface area of the solute).[11] For quantification, see the equation in the article on solubility equilibrium. For highly defective crystals, solubility may increase with the increasing degree of disorder. Both of these effects occur because of the dependence of solubility constant on the Gibbs energy of the crystal. The last two effects, although often difficult to measure, are of practical importance.[citation needed] For example, they provide the driving force for precipitate aging (the crystal size spontaneously increasing with time).

Temperature

[edit]

The solubility of a given solute in a given solvent is function of temperature. Depending on the change in enthalpyH) of the dissolution reaction, i.e., on the endothermicH > 0) or exothermicH < 0) character of the dissolution reaction, the solubility of a given compound may increase or decrease with temperature. The van 't Hoff equation relates the change of solubility equilibrium constant (Ksp) to temperature change and to reaction enthalpy change.

  • For most solids and liquids, their solubility increases with temperature because their dissolution reaction is endothermic (ΔH > 0).[12] In liquid water at high temperatures, (e.g. that approaching the critical temperature), the solubility of ionic solutes tends to decrease due to the change of properties and structure of liquid water; the lower dielectric constant results in a less polar solvent and in a change of hydration energy affecting the ΔG of the dissolution reaction.
  • Gaseous solutes exhibit more complex behavior with temperature. As the temperature is raised, gases usually become less soluble in water (exothermic dissolution reaction related to their hydration) (to a minimum, which is below 120 °C for most permanent gases[13]), but more soluble in organic solvents (endothermic dissolution reaction related to their solvation).[12]

The chart shows solubility curves for some typical solid inorganic salts in liquid water (temperature is in degrees Celsius, i.e. kelvins minus 273.15).[14] Many salts behave like barium nitrate and disodium hydrogen arsenate, and show a large increase in solubility with temperature (ΔH > 0). Some solutes (e.g. sodium chloride in water) exhibit solubility that is fairly independent of temperature (ΔH ≈ 0). A few, such as calcium sulfate (gypsum) and cerium(III) sulfate, become less soluble in water as temperature increases (ΔH < 0).[15] This is also the case for calcium hydroxide (portlandite), whose solubility at 70 °C is about half of its value at 25 °C. The dissolution of calcium hydroxide in water is also an exothermic process (ΔH < 0). As dictated by the van 't Hoff equation and Le Chatelier's principle, low temperatures favor dissolution of Ca(OH)2. Portlandite solubility increases at low temperature. This temperature dependence is sometimes referred to as "retrograde" or "inverse" solubility.[citation needed] Occasionally, a more complex pattern is observed, as with sodium sulfate, where the less soluble decahydrate crystal (mirabilite) loses water of crystallization at 32 °C to form a more soluble anhydrous phase (thenardite) with a smaller change in Gibbs free energyG) in the dissolution reaction.[citation needed]

The solubility of organic compounds nearly always increases with temperature. The technique of recrystallization, used for purification of solids, depends on a solute's different solubilities in hot and cold solvent. A few exceptions exist, such as certain cyclodextrins.[16]

Pressure

[edit]

For condensed phases (solids and liquids), the pressure dependence of solubility is typically weak and usually neglected in practice. Assuming an ideal solution, the dependence can be quantified as:

where the index iterates the components, is the mole fraction of the -th component in the solution, is the pressure, the index refers to constant temperature, is the partial molar volume of the -th component in the solution, is the partial molar volume of the -th component in the dissolving solid, and is the universal gas constant.[17]

The pressure dependence of solubility does occasionally have practical significance. For example, precipitation fouling of oil fields and wells by calcium sulfate (which decreases its solubility with decreasing pressure) can result in decreased productivity with time.

Solubility of gases

[edit]

Henry's law is used to quantify the solubility of gases in solvents. The solubility of a gas in a solvent is directly proportional to the partial pressure of that gas above the solvent. This relationship is similar to Raoult's law and can be written as:

where is a temperature-dependent constant (for example, 769.2 L·atm/mol for dioxygen (O2) in water at 298 K), is the partial pressure (in atm), and is the concentration of the dissolved gas in the liquid (in mol/L).

The solubility of gases is sometimes also quantified using Bunsen solubility coefficient.

In the presence of small bubbles, the solubility of the gas does not depend on the bubble radius in any other way than through the effect of the radius on pressure (i.e. the solubility of gas in the liquid in contact with small bubbles is increased due to pressure increase by Δp = 2γ/r; see Young–Laplace equation).[18]

Henry's law is valid for gases that do not undergo change of chemical speciation on dissolution. Sieverts' law shows a case when this assumption does not hold.

The carbon dioxide solubility in seawater is also affected by temperature, pH of the solution, and by the carbonate buffer. The decrease of solubility of carbon dioxide in seawater when temperature increases is also an important retroaction factor (positive feedback) exacerbating past and future climate changes as observed in ice cores from the Vostok site in Antarctica. At the geological time scale, because of the Milankovich cycles, when the astronomical parameters of the Earth orbit and its rotation axis progressively change and modify the solar irradiance at the Earth surface, temperature starts to increase. When a deglaciation period is initiated, the progressive warming of the oceans releases CO2 into the atmosphere because of its lower solubility in warmer sea water. In turn, higher levels of CO2 in the atmosphere increase the greenhouse effect and carbon dioxide acts as an amplifier of the general warming.

Polarity

[edit]

A popular aphorism used for predicting solubility is "like dissolves like" also expressed in the Latin language as "Similia similibus solventur".[19] This statement indicates that a solute will dissolve best in a solvent that has a similar chemical structure to itself, based on favorable entropy of mixing. This view is simplistic, but it is a useful rule of thumb. The overall solvation capacity of a solvent depends primarily on its polarity.[a] For example, a very polar (hydrophilic) solute such as urea is very soluble in highly polar water, less soluble in fairly polar methanol, and practically insoluble in non-polar solvents such as benzene. In contrast, a non-polar or lipophilic solute such as naphthalene is insoluble in water, fairly soluble in methanol, and highly soluble in non-polar benzene.[20]

Dissolution of sodium chloride in water

In even more simple terms a simple ionic compound (with positive and negative ions) such as sodium chloride (common salt) is easily soluble in a highly polar solvent (with some separation of positive (δ+) and negative (δ-) charges in the covalent molecule) such as water, as thus the sea is salty as it accumulates dissolved salts since early geological ages.

The solubility is favored by entropy of mixingS) and depends on enthalpy of dissolutionH) and the hydrophobic effect. The free energy of dissolution (Gibbs energy) depends on temperature and is given by the relationship: ΔG = ΔH – TΔS. Smaller ΔG means greater solubility.

Chemists often exploit differences in solubilities to separate and purify compounds from reaction mixtures, using the technique of liquid-liquid extraction. This applies in vast areas of chemistry from drug synthesis to spent nuclear fuel reprocessing.

Rate of dissolution

[edit]

Dissolution is not an instantaneous process. The rate of solubilization (in kg/s) is related to the solubility product and the surface area of the material. The speed at which a solid dissolves may depend on its crystallinity or lack thereof in the case of amorphous solids and the surface area (crystallite size) and the presence of polymorphism. Many practical systems illustrate this effect, for example in designing methods for controlled drug delivery. In some cases, solubility equilibria can take a long time to establish (hours, days, months, or many years; depending on the nature of the solute and other factors).

The rate of dissolution can be often expressed by the Noyes–Whitney equation or the Nernst and Brunner equation[21] of the form:

where:

  • = mass of dissolved material
  • = time
  • = surface area of the interface between the dissolving substance and the solvent
  • = diffusion coefficient
  • = thickness of the boundary layer of the solvent at the surface of the dissolving substance
  • = mass concentration of the substance on the surface
  • = mass concentration of the substance in the bulk of the solvent

For dissolution limited by diffusion (or mass transfer if mixing is present), is equal to the solubility of the substance. When the dissolution rate of a pure substance is normalized to the surface area of the solid (which usually changes with time during the dissolution process), then it is expressed in kg/m2s and referred to as "intrinsic dissolution rate". The intrinsic dissolution rate is defined by the United States Pharmacopeia.

Dissolution rates vary by orders of magnitude between different systems. Typically, very low dissolution rates parallel low solubilities, and substances with high solubilities exhibit high dissolution rates, as suggested by the Noyes-Whitney equation.

Theories of solubility

[edit]

Solubility product

[edit]

Solubility constants are used to describe saturated solutions of ionic compounds of relatively low solubility (see solubility equilibrium). The solubility constant is a special case of an equilibrium constant. Since it is a product of ion concentrations in equilibrium, it is also known as the solubility product. It describes the balance between dissolved ions from the salt and undissolved salt. The solubility constant is also "applicable" (i.e. useful) to precipitation, the reverse of the dissolving reaction. As with other equilibrium constants, temperature can affect the numerical value of solubility constant. While the solubility constant is not as simple as solubility, the value of this constant is generally independent of the presence of other species in the solvent.

Other theories

[edit]

The Flory–Huggins solution theory is a theoretical model describing the solubility of polymers. The Hansen solubility parameters and the Hildebrand solubility parameters are empirical methods for the prediction of solubility. It is also possible to predict solubility from other physical constants such as the enthalpy of fusion.

The octanol-water partition coefficient, usually expressed as its logarithm (Log P), is a measure of differential solubility of a compound in a hydrophobic solvent (1-octanol) and a hydrophilic solvent (water). The logarithm of these two values enables compounds to be ranked in terms of hydrophilicity (or hydrophobicity).

The energy change associated with dissolving is usually given per mole of solute as the enthalpy of solution.

Applications

[edit]

Solubility is of fundamental importance in a large number of scientific disciplines and practical applications, ranging from ore processing and nuclear reprocessing to the use of medicines, and the transport of pollutants.

Solubility is often said to be one of the "characteristic properties of a substance", which means that solubility is commonly used to describe the substance, to indicate a substance's polarity, to help to distinguish it from other substances, and as a guide to applications of the substance. For example, indigo is described as "insoluble in water, alcohol, or ether but soluble in chloroform, nitrobenzene, or concentrated sulfuric acid".[22]

Solubility of a substance is useful when separating mixtures. For example, a mixture of salt (sodium chloride) and silica may be separated by dissolving the salt in water, and filtering off the undissolved silica. The synthesis of chemical compounds, by the milligram in a laboratory, or by the ton in industry, both make use of the relative solubilities of the desired product, as well as unreacted starting materials, byproducts, and side products to achieve separation.

Another example of this is the synthesis of benzoic acid from phenylmagnesium bromide and dry ice. Benzoic acid is more soluble in an organic solvent such as dichloromethane or diethyl ether, and when shaken with this organic solvent in a separatory funnel, will preferentially dissolve in the organic layer. The other reaction products, including the magnesium bromide, will remain in the aqueous layer, clearly showing that separation based on solubility is achieved. This process, known as liquid–liquid extraction, is an important technique in synthetic chemistry. Recycling is used to ensure maximum extraction.

Differential solubility

[edit]

In flowing systems, differences in solubility often determine the dissolution-precipitation driven transport of species. This happens when different parts of the system experience different conditions. Even slightly different conditions can result in significant effects, given sufficient time.

For example, relatively low solubility compounds are found to be soluble in more extreme environments, resulting in geochemical and geological effects of the activity of hydrothermal fluids in the Earth's crust. These are often the source of high quality economic mineral deposits and precious or semi-precious gems. In the same way, compounds with low solubility will dissolve over extended time (geological time), resulting in significant effects such as extensive cave systems or Karstic land surfaces.

Solubility of ionic compounds in water

[edit]

Some ionic compounds (salts) dissolve in water, which arises because of the attraction between positive and negative charges (see: solvation). For example, the salt's positive ions (e.g. Ag+) attract the partially negative oxygen atom in H2O. Likewise, the salt's negative ions (e.g. Cl) attract the partially positive hydrogens in H2O. Note: the oxygen atom is partially negative because it is more electronegative than hydrogen, and vice versa (see: chemical polarity).

AgCl(s) ⇌ Ag+(aq) + Cl(aq)

However, there is a limit to how much salt can be dissolved in a given volume of water. This concentration is the solubility and related to the solubility product, Ksp. This equilibrium constant depends on the type of salt (AgCl vs. NaCl, for example), temperature, and the common ion effect.

One can calculate the amount of AgCl that will dissolve in 1 liter of pure water as follows:

Ksp = [Ag+] × [Cl] / M2 (definition of solubility product; M = mol/L)
Ksp = 1.8 × 10−10 (from a table of solubility products)

[Ag+] = [Cl], in the absence of other silver or chloride salts, so

[Ag+]2 = 1.8 × 10−10 M2
[Ag+] = 1.34 × 10−5 mol/L

The result: 1 liter of water can dissolve 1.34 × 10−5 moles of AgCl at room temperature. Compared with other salts, AgCl is poorly soluble in water. For instance, table salt (NaCl) has a much higher Ksp = 36 and is, therefore, more soluble. The following table gives an overview of solubility rules for various ionic compounds.

Easily soluble Limited solubility or insoluble[23]
Group I and NH4+ compounds (except lithium phosphate) Carbonates (except Group I, NH4+ and uranyl compounds)
Nitrates Sulfites (except Group I and NH4+ compounds)
Acetates (ethanoates) (except Ag+ compounds) Phosphates (except Group I and NH4+ compounds (excluding Li+))
Chlorides (chlorates and perchlorates), bromides and iodides (except Ag+, Pb2+, Cu+ and Hg22+) Hydroxides and oxides (except Group I, NH4+, Ba2+, Sr2+ and Tl+)
Sulfates (except Ag+, Pb2+, Ba2+, Sr2+ and Ca2+) Sulfides (except Group I, Group II and NH4+ compounds)

Solubility of organic compounds

[edit]

The principle outlined above under polarity, that like dissolves like, is the usual guide to solubility with organic systems. For example, petroleum jelly will dissolve in gasoline because both petroleum jelly and gasoline are non-polar hydrocarbons. It will not, on the other hand, dissolve in ethyl alcohol or water, since the polarity of these solvents is too high. Sugar will not dissolve in gasoline, since sugar is too polar in comparison with gasoline. A mixture of gasoline and sugar can therefore be separated by filtration or extraction with water.

Solid solution

[edit]

This term is often used in the field of metallurgy to refer to the extent that an alloying element will dissolve into the base metal without forming a separate phase. The solvus or solubility line (or curve) is the line (or lines) on a phase diagram that give the limits of solute addition. That is, the lines show the maximum amount of a component that can be added to another component and still be in solid solution. In the solid's crystalline structure, the 'solute' element can either take the place of the matrix within the lattice (a substitutional position; for example, chromium in iron) or take a place in a space between the lattice points (an interstitial position; for example, carbon in iron).

In microelectronic fabrication, solid solubility refers to the maximum concentration of impurities one can place into the substrate.

In solid compounds (as opposed to elements), the solubility of a solute element can also depend on the phases separating out in equilibrium. For example, amount of Sn soluble in the ZnSb phase can depend significantly on whether the phases separating out in equilibrium are (Zn4Sb3+Sn(L)) or (ZnSnSb2+Sn(L)).[24] Besides these, the ZnSb compound with Sn as a solute can separate out into other combinations of phases after the solubility limit is reached depending on the initial chemical composition during synthesis. Each combination produces a different solubility of Sn in ZnSb. Hence solubility studies in compounds, concluded upon the first instance of observing secondary phases separating out might underestimate solubility.[25] While the maximum number of phases separating out at once in equilibrium can be determined by the Gibb's phase rule, for chemical compounds there is no limit on the number of such phase separating combinations itself. Hence, establishing the "maximum solubility" in solid compounds experimentally can be difficult, requiring equilibration of many samples. If the dominant crystallographic defect (mostly interstitial or substitutional point defects) involved in the solid-solution can be chemically intuited beforehand, then using some simple thermodynamic guidelines can considerably reduce the number of samples required to establish maximum solubility.[26]

Incongruent dissolution

[edit]

Many substances dissolve congruently (i.e. the composition of the solid and the dissolved solute stoichiometrically match). However, some substances may dissolve incongruently, whereby the composition of the solute in solution does not match that of the solid. This solubilization is accompanied by alteration of the "primary solid" and possibly formation of a secondary solid phase. However, in general, some primary solid also remains and a complex solubility equilibrium establishes. For example, dissolution of albite may result in formation of gibbsite.[27]

NaAlSi3O8(s) + H+ + 7H2O ⇌ Na+ + Al(OH)3(s) + 3H4SiO4.

In this case, the solubility of albite is expected to depend on the solid-to-solvent ratio. This kind of solubility is of great importance in geology, where it results in formation of metamorphic rocks.

In principle, both congruent and incongruent dissolution can lead to the formation of secondary solid phases in equilibrium. So, in the field of Materials Science, the solubility for both cases is described more generally on chemical composition phase diagrams.

Solubility prediction

[edit]

Solubility is a property of interest in many aspects of science, including but not limited to: environmental predictions, biochemistry, pharmacy, drug-design, agrochemical design, and protein ligand binding. Aqueous solubility is of fundamental interest owing to the vital biological and transportation functions played by water.[28][29][30] In addition, to this clear scientific interest in water solubility and solvent effects; accurate predictions of solubility are important industrially. The ability to accurately predict a molecule's solubility represents potentially large financial savings in many chemical product development processes, such as pharmaceuticals.[31] In the pharmaceutical industry, solubility predictions form part of the early stage lead optimisation process of drug candidates. Solubility remains a concern all the way to formulation.[31] A number of methods have been applied to such predictions including quantitative structure–activity relationships (QSAR), quantitative structure–property relationships (QSPR) and data mining. These models provide efficient predictions of solubility and represent the current standard. The draw back such models is that they can lack physical insight. A method founded in physical theory, capable of achieving similar levels of accuracy at an sensible cost, would be a powerful tool scientifically and industrially.[32][33][34][35]

Methods founded in physical theory tend to use thermodynamic cycles, a concept from classical thermodynamics. The two common thermodynamic cycles used involve either the calculation of the free energy of sublimation (solid to gas without going through a liquid state) and the free energy of solvating a gaseous molecule (gas to solution), or the free energy of fusion (solid to a molten phase) and the free energy of mixing (molten to solution). These two process are represented in the following diagrams.

Thermodynamic cycle for calculating solvation via sublimation
Thermodynamic cycle for calculating solvation via fusion

These cycles have been used for attempts at first principles predictions (solving using the fundamental physical equations) using physically motivated solvent models,[33] to create parametric equations and QSPR models[36][34] and combinations of the two.[34] The use of these cycles enables the calculation of the solvation free energy indirectly via either gas (in the sublimation cycle) or a melt (fusion cycle). This is helpful as calculating the free energy of solvation directly is extremely difficult. The free energy of solvation can be converted to a solubility value using various formulae, the most general case being shown below, where the numerator is the free energy of solvation, R is the gas constant and T is the temperature in kelvins.[33]

Well known fitted equations for solubility prediction are the general solubility equations. These equations stem from the work of Yalkowsky et al.[37][38] The original formula is given first, followed by a revised formula which takes a different assumption of complete miscibility in octanol.[38]

These equations are founded on the principles of the fusion cycle.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Solubility is the analytical composition of a saturated solution, expressed in terms of the proportion of a designated solute in a designated solvent when the solvent is present in excess.[1] This property quantifies the maximum amount of solute that can dissolve in a given quantity of solvent at equilibrium under specified conditions, such as temperature and pressure, forming a homogeneous mixture known as a solution.[1] Solubility is typically expressed in units including grams of solute per 100 grams or milliliters of solvent, molarity (moles per liter), molality (moles per kilogram of solvent), or mole fraction, depending on the context and precision required.[2] A key guiding principle for predicting solubility is "like dissolves like," meaning substances with similar intermolecular forces—such as polar solutes in polar solvents or nonpolar solutes in nonpolar solvents—tend to form solutions more readily due to favorable interactions between solute and solvent particles.[3] For ionic compounds, solubility often follows specific rules based on the ions involved, such as nitrates being generally soluble in water.[4] Several factors influence solubility, including temperature, pressure, and the chemical nature of the solute and solvent. For most solid solutes in liquid solvents, solubility increases with rising temperature as the kinetic energy enhances the disruption of solute lattice structures.[5] In contrast, the solubility of gases in liquids generally decreases with increasing temperature, as higher thermal energy favors the escape of gas molecules from the solution.[6] Pressure significantly affects gas solubility, with higher pressures increasing the amount of gas that dissolves according to Henry's law, which states that the solubility of a gas is directly proportional to the partial pressure of the gas above the solution.[7] These factors are critical in applications ranging from pharmaceutical formulations, where controlled solubility ensures drug delivery, to environmental processes like ocean carbon cycling influenced by gas solubility in water.[8]

Fundamentals of Solubility

Definition and Basic Principles

Solubility refers to the maximum amount of a solute that can dissolve in a given quantity of solvent under specified conditions of temperature, pressure, and composition, resulting in the formation of a saturated solution where the solution is in dynamic equilibrium with any undissolved solute. This property is fundamental to understanding solution formation and is expressed quantitatively as the analytical composition of the saturated solution, often in terms of concentration, mass per volume, or mole fraction.[1] The process of dissolution represents a physical equilibrium, in which the rate of solute particles entering the solution equals the rate at which they crystallize out, maintaining a constant solute concentration once saturation is reached./Equilibria/Solubilty/Solubility_and_Factors_Affecting_Solubility) The concept of solubility has evolved through historical observations and formal definitions. Early insights into gas solubility were provided by English chemist William Henry in the early 19th century, who through systematic experiments demonstrated the proportional relationship between gas pressure and its solubility in liquids, laying groundwork for later quantitative studies.[9] Over time, these empirical foundations led to modern standardization by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), which defines solubility precisely to account for diverse solute-solvent systems and conditions, ensuring consistency in scientific communication and application.[1] To describe the extent of solubility, qualitative terms are commonly used based on approximate thresholds in grams of solute per 100 mL of solvent at standard conditions: substances are considered soluble if exceeding 1 g/100 mL, sparingly soluble if between 0.1 and 1 g/100 mL, and insoluble if less than 0.1 g/100 mL.[10] [11] For instance, sodium chloride (NaCl) exemplifies high solubility in water, dissolving at about 36 g/100 mL at 25°C, enabling its widespread use in aqueous solutions.[12] In contrast, silver chloride (AgCl) is insoluble, with a solubility of only approximately 0.00019 g/100 mL at 25°C, which underlies its precipitation in qualitative analysis.[13] These qualifiers help predict behavior in chemical processes without requiring exact measurements.

Molecular View of Dissolution

The dissolution of a solute in a solvent occurs at the molecular level through the process of solvation, where solute particles are surrounded and stabilized by solvent molecules, forming new intermolecular interactions that replace the original solute-solute attractions.[14] For ionic solutes in polar solvents like water, this involves strong ion-dipole forces, in which the partial charges on the solvent molecules align with the full charges on the ions, effectively pulling them apart from the solid lattice.[15] In cases of non-ionic solutes, weaker van der Waals forces or dipole-dipole interactions may contribute to solvation, facilitating the integration of the solute into the solvent structure.[14] A key aspect of dissolution is the energy balance between breaking solute-solute bonds and forming solute-solvent bonds; for ionic solids, this pits the lattice energy—the energy required to separate ions in the crystal—against the hydration energy released when ions interact with water molecules.[16] If the hydration energy sufficiently offsets the lattice energy, the process becomes energetically favorable, though the overall spontaneity depends on the Gibbs free energy change, given by
ΔG=ΔHTΔS \Delta G = \Delta H - T \Delta S
where ΔH\Delta H represents the enthalpy change (primarily from net energy shifts in bond breaking and forming), ΔS\Delta S is the entropy change (reflecting increased disorder from dispersing solute particles), and TT is the absolute temperature.[17] Negative ΔG\Delta G indicates a spontaneous dissolution, with entropy often playing a crucial role in overcoming any endothermic enthalpy contributions.[17] In the solvation shell, or solvent cage, solvent molecules form a structured layer around the solute, dynamically orienting to maximize favorable interactions; for example, water molecules arrange with their oxygen atoms facing Na+^+ ions and hydrogen atoms toward Cl^- ions, creating a hydration sphere that stabilizes the ions in solution.[18] This cage formation enhances solubility by isolating solute particles and preventing recombination, while the solvent's polarity is essential, as it enables the "like dissolves like" principle where solutes with similar intermolecular forces to the solvent are more readily solvated.[19]

Quantification of Solubility

Measures per Solvent or Solution

Solubility is often quantified relative to the amount of solvent used, providing a measure independent of the total solution volume. One common expression is grams of solute per 100 grams of solvent (g/100 g), which directly indicates the mass ratio and is particularly useful for comparing solubilities across different solvents without considering density variations. Another key unit is molality (m), defined as the number of moles of solute per kilogram of solvent, which normalizes concentrations based on solvent mass and remains constant despite changes in solution volume. For instance, the solubility of potassium nitrate (KNO₃) in water at 25°C is approximately 38 g per 100 g of water, highlighting its high solubility in this metric.[20] In contrast, measures expressed per quantity of solution account for the total mixture and are suited for volumetric analyses or reactions in fixed volumes. Grams of solute per 100 milliliters of solution (g/100 mL) is a practical unit for laboratory preparations, as it aligns with common measurement tools like pipettes and reflects the density of the solution implicitly.[19] Molarity (M), or moles of solute per liter of solution, facilitates stoichiometric calculations in chemical reactions, while mole fraction (X), the ratio of moles of solute to total moles in the solution, offers a dimensionless scale ideal for thermodynamic discussions. The same KNO₃ solubility at 25°C corresponds to approximately 35 g/100 mL of solution, though exact values depend on whether expressed per solvent mass or solution volume. This approximation holds better for dilute systems where solution density ≈1 g/mL.[20] Each unit has specific advantages depending on the context; for example, molality is preferred for colligative properties like boiling point elevation because it is unaffected by temperature-induced volume changes, unlike molarity, which varies with solution density.[3] Mole fraction, meanwhile, simplifies Raoult's law applications by being independent of the solvent's mass or volume. For ionic compounds, saturation equilibrium is conceptually bounded by the solubility product constant (Ksp), an equilibrium constant that equals the product of ion concentrations (in moles per liter) raised to their stoichiometric powers in a saturated solution.[21] This value serves as a limit indicating the maximum solubility under ideal conditions, with lower Ksp values signifying poorer solubility, though it applies primarily to sparingly soluble salts and assumes no common ion effects or complex formations.[21]

Handling Liquid and Gaseous Solutes

Liquid solutes are handled differently in solubility quantification due to their fluid nature, which allows for complete miscibility or partial mixing without the need to disrupt a rigid structure. Miscibility refers to the ability of two or more liquids to form a homogeneous solution in all proportions, as seen in the ethanol-water system where polar interactions enable full dissolution.[22] In contrast, limited solubility occurs when liquids do not mix completely, such as oil and water, where nonpolar hydrocarbons separate into distinct layers due to unfavorable interactions.[22] Common units for expressing the solubility of liquid solutes include volume percent (v/v), defined as the volume of solute per 100 volumes of solution, and mole fraction, which represents the ratio of moles of solute to total moles in the mixture.[19][23] Gaseous solutes are quantified primarily through their equilibrium distribution between the gas phase and the liquid solvent, often expressed in volume/volume (V/V) terms or as a function of partial pressure. Henry's law provides the fundamental relationship, stating that at constant temperature, the solubility $ S $ of a gas in a liquid is directly proportional to the partial pressure $ P $ of the gas above the liquid:
S=kHP S = k_H \cdot P

where $ k_H $ is the Henry's law constant, which varies with temperature and the gas-solvent pair.[24] This constant can be expressed in units such as atm/mol or mol/(L·atm), allowing conversion between concentration and pressure.[25] A practical example is the dissolution of carbon dioxide (CO₂) in carbonated beverages, where high pressure during bottling increases $ k_H \cdot P $, dissolving CO₂ to create fizz upon opening as pressure drops and the gas escapes.[26]
Unlike solid solutes, which require energy to overcome lattice energy for dissolution, liquid and gaseous solutes lack a crystalline lattice, so their solubility emphasizes equilibrium partitioning driven by intermolecular forces and phase distribution.[27][28] This partitioning reflects a dynamic balance where the solute distributes between phases based on solubility parameters, without the enthalpic barrier of lattice disruption characteristic of solids.[29]

Unit Conversions and Equivalents

Converting between different units of solubility is essential for comparing data across scientific literature, engineering applications, and regulatory standards, as solubility is often reported in context-specific formats such as mass per mass, moles per volume, or mole fractions.[30] Common conversions involve transforming molality (moles of solute per kilogram of solvent) to molarity (moles of solute per liter of solution) or mass-based units like grams of solute per 100 grams of solvent to mole fraction. These transformations require knowledge of molar masses, solution densities, and sometimes approximations for dilute solutions.[31] The conversion from molality to molarity accounts for the volume of the solution, which depends on the solvent's density and the solute's contribution to the total mass. For dilute aqueous solutions, an approximation is M ≈ m (since 1 kg water ≈ 1 L). For more accurate results, especially in concentrated solutions, the full calculation uses the actual solution density (ρ\rho):
M=mρ1+mMsolute1000 M = \frac{m \cdot \rho}{1 + m \cdot \frac{M_{\text{solute}}}{1000}}
where MM is molarity in mol/L, mm is molality in mol/kg, ρ\rho is solution density in g/mL, and MsoluteM_{\text{solute}} is the molar mass of the solute in g/mol. This incorporates the total mass and volume of the solution.[31] Similarly, converting from grams of solute per 100 grams of solvent (g/100 g) to mole fraction (XX) involves calculating the moles of each component. The mole fraction of the solute is given by:
X=nsolutensolute+nsolvent X = \frac{n_{\text{solute}}}{n_{\text{solute}} + n_{\text{solvent}}}
where nsoluten_{\text{solute}} and nsolventn_{\text{solvent}} are the moles of solute and solvent, respectively, determined from their masses and molar masses. For example, if 36 g of solute is dissolved in 100 g of solvent, divide each mass by the appropriate molar mass to find the moles, then apply the formula.[30] A practical example is the solubility of sodium chloride (NaCl) in water at 25°C, reported as 36 g NaCl per 100 g water.[12] First, convert to molality: moles of NaCl = 36 g / 58.44 g/mol ≈ 0.616 mol; molality mm = 0.616 mol / 0.100 kg = 6.16 m. To find molarity, note the total mass of solution = 136 g and density of the saturated solution ≈ 1.202 g/mL, so volume ≈ 136 g / 1.202 g/mL ≈ 0.113 L; thus, MM ≈ 0.616 mol / 0.113 L ≈ 5.4 M.[12] This conversion highlights the need for solution density, which is often assumed as 1 g/mL for dilute cases but leads to errors in concentrated solutions like this one.[32] In different systems, particularly for trace solubilities, parts per million (ppm) is widely used, defined as milligrams of solute per kilogram of solution (or equivalently, μ\mug/g for mass basis). This unit is common in environmental contexts, such as assessing pollutant solubility in water bodies, where concentrations below 1 mg/L (≈ 1 ppm assuming density ≈ 1 g/mL) indicate trace levels.[33] For instance, the solubility of sparingly soluble salts like lead(II) sulfate in natural waters is often expressed in ppm to evaluate environmental risks.[34] Errors in unit conversions can arise from variations in temperature and solution density, which affect both the reported solubility and the conversion factors. Solubility itself often changes with temperature (e.g., increasing for most solids in water), and density decreases as temperature rises, potentially introducing up to 5-10% error in molarity calculations if not adjusted.[35] For precise work, use temperature-specific density values and re-evaluate solubility data at the exact conditions.[36]

Factors Influencing Solubility

Temperature Dependence

The solubility of solid solutes in liquid solvents generally varies with temperature, depending on whether the dissolution process is endothermic or exothermic. In endothermic dissolution, where the process absorbs heat, solubility increases as temperature rises, shifting the equilibrium toward greater dissolution to absorb the added thermal energy. For instance, the solubility of potassium nitrate (KNO₃) in water exemplifies this trend, increasing from about 13 g per 100 mL at 0°C to 247 g per 100 mL at 100°C.[37] Conversely, exothermic dissolution releases heat, leading to decreased solubility with increasing temperature as the system shifts to counteract the added heat by favoring the undissolved state. Calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)₂) in water demonstrates this behavior, with solubility dropping from 0.173 g per 100 mL at 20°C to 0.066 g per 100 mL at 100°C. This temperature dependence can be understood through Le Chatelier's principle, which predicts that the equilibrium position will adjust to minimize changes in conditions. For dissolution, the process is treated as a reversible equilibrium: solute(s) ⇌ solute(aq) + heat (for exothermic) or solute(s) + heat ⇌ solute(aq) (for endothermic). Increasing temperature thus drives endothermic equilibria forward, enhancing solubility, while opposing exothermic ones, reducing it./Equilibria/Solubilty/Temperature_Effects_on_Solubility) Quantitatively, the relationship between temperature and solubility is described by the van't Hoff equation, derived from the temperature dependence of the equilibrium constant KK (here, related to the solubility product or saturation concentration). The equation is:
d(lnK)dT=ΔHRT2 \frac{d(\ln K)}{dT} = \frac{\Delta H}{RT^2}
where ΔH\Delta H is the enthalpy change of dissolution, RR is the gas constant, and TT is the absolute temperature. Integrating this form allows prediction of how solubility varies with temperature, assuming ΔH\Delta H is constant; a positive ΔH\Delta H (endothermic) yields increasing KK with TT, while negative ΔH\Delta H (exothermic) yields decreasing KK./26%3A_Chemical_Equilibrium/26.07%3A_The_van_%27t_Hoff_Equation) Exceptions to these patterns occur, particularly with hydrated salts undergoing phase transitions. For example, sodium sulfate decahydrate (Na₂SO₄·10H₂O) exhibits retrograde solubility above approximately 32°C, where its solubility peaks and then slightly decreases due to dehydration and transition to the anhydrous form, altering the effective dissolution thermodynamics.

Pressure Effects

The solubility of gases in liquids is significantly influenced by pressure, as described by Henry's law, which states that at constant temperature, the solubility $ S $ of a gas in a liquid is directly proportional to the partial pressure $ P $ of the gas above the liquid:
S=kP S = k \cdot P
where $ k $ is the Henry's law constant, typically expressed in units such as mol/L/atm or mol/L/bar.[38] This relationship arises from the increased frequency of gas molecule collisions with the liquid surface under higher pressure, leading to greater dissolution until equilibrium is reached./Physical_Properties_of_Matter/Solutions_and_Mixtures/Ideal_Solutions/Dissolving_Gases_In_Liquids_Henrys_Law) For instance, the solubility of oxygen in human blood, which follows Henry's law, approximately doubles when the total pressure increases from 1 atm to 2 atm, assuming the partial pressure of oxygen also doubles in compressed air; this enhances oxygen delivery but is limited by blood's low baseline solubility of about 0.003 mL O₂/100 mL blood/mm Hg at 37°C.[39] Henry's law constants for common gases vary widely; for oxygen in water at 25°C, $ k $ is approximately 0.0013 mol/L/atm, while for carbon dioxide it is higher at 0.034 mol/L/atm, reflecting differences in gas-liquid interactions.[40] In contrast, the solubility of liquids in liquids and solids in liquids exhibits minimal dependence on pressure under normal conditions, due to the low compressibility of these phases, which results in negligible changes in molar volume during dissolution./13:_Solutions/13.04:_Effects_of_Temperature_and_Pressure_on_Solubility) However, under extreme pressures, such as those encountered in deep-sea environments (up to several hundred atm) or industrial high-pressure processes, solubility of solids can increase slightly if the partial molar volume of the solute in solution is less than in the solid phase, as predicted by thermodynamic relations.[41] A practical application of pressure effects on gas solubility is in scuba diving, where increased ambient pressure at depth raises the solubility of nitrogen in blood and tissues according to Henry's law; upon rapid ascent and pressure reduction, dissolved nitrogen forms bubbles, potentially causing decompression sickness if not managed through staged decompression stops.[42]

Polarity and Intermolecular Forces

The solubility of a substance is fundamentally governed by the principle that "like dissolves like," where polar solutes tend to dissolve in polar solvents, and nonpolar solutes dissolve in nonpolar solvents, due to compatible intermolecular attractions.[3] For instance, glucose, a polar molecule with multiple hydroxyl groups, dissolves readily in water through hydrogen bonding between its -OH groups and water molecules.[43] In contrast, nonpolar hexane dissolves in nonpolar benzene primarily via London dispersion forces between their hydrocarbon structures.[44] This compatibility arises because the solute-solvent interactions must overcome the solute-solute and solvent-solvent forces for dissolution to occur effectively.[45] Intermolecular forces play a hierarchical role in determining solubility, ranked by strength as follows: ion-ion interactions are the strongest, followed by ion-dipole, dipole-dipole (including hydrogen bonding as a specialized form), dipole-induced dipole, and the weakest London dispersion forces.[46] In polar solvents like water, stronger forces such as ion-dipole and hydrogen bonding stabilize ionic or polar solutes by surrounding them with oriented solvent molecules, enhancing solubility.[47] Nonpolar solutes, lacking permanent dipoles, rely on weaker dispersion forces, making them more soluble in nonpolar environments where similar weak attractions predominate.[48] The dielectric constant (ε) of a solvent quantifies its polarity and ability to screen charges, directly influencing solubility; high ε values, such as water's ε ≈ 80 at 25°C, promote the dissolution of ionic compounds by reducing electrostatic attractions between ions.[49] Conversely, low ε solvents like hexane (ε ≈ 2) exhibit poor solvation of ions but effectively dissolve nonpolar molecules through minimal charge separation.[49] This property underscores why ionic salts are highly soluble in water but insoluble in hydrocarbons.[43] A classic example of polarity's impact is oil floating on water: nonpolar oil molecules interact weakly via dispersion forces among themselves and cannot form favorable interactions with polar water, leading to phase separation due to water's strong hydrogen bonding network.[50] Surfactants address this incompatibility by featuring both polar (hydrophilic) heads and nonpolar (hydrophobic) tails, enabling them to bridge the two phases, stabilize emulsions, and enhance solubility of nonpolar substances in aqueous media. Solvation energy, derived from these molecular interactions, briefly quantifies the net stabilization achieved during dissolution.[45]

Solubility in Specific Systems

Gases in Liquids

The solubility of gases in liquids is fundamentally described by Henry's law, which posits that at a constant temperature, the solubility of a gas in a liquid is directly proportional to the partial pressure of the gas in equilibrium with the liquid phase. This relationship is expressed as $ c = k_H \cdot p $, where $ c $ is the concentration of the dissolved gas, $ p $ is the partial pressure, and $ k_H $ is the Henry's law constant specific to the gas-solvent pair. The law assumes dilute solutions and ideal behavior, providing a foundational framework for predicting gas dissolution in processes ranging from industrial gas absorption to environmental equilibria.[51] However, Henry's law has limitations, particularly at high pressures where non-ideal gas behavior and solute-solvent interactions cause deviations from linearity. For instance, at elevated pressures, the solubility of gases like CO₂ can exceed predictions due to enhanced molecular clustering or fugacity effects, complicating applications in high-pressure systems such as deep-sea environments or supercritical extractions.[51] Temperature also profoundly influences gas solubility; unlike most solids, gases exhibit an inverse temperature dependence because dissolution is typically exothermic, favoring lower temperatures for higher solubility. The Henry's constant generally decreases with temperature for common gases in aqueous solvents, consistent with the overall decline in solubility.[52] A representative example is oxygen in water, where solubility drops from about 9.1 mg/L at 20°C to 6.4 mg/L at 40°C under atmospheric pressure, roughly a 30% reduction that impacts oxygen availability in warming aquatic systems.[53] Additional factors modulate gas solubility in liquids. Electrolytes induce a salting-out effect by structuring water molecules around ions, reducing the availability of solvent sites for gas molecules and thereby decreasing solubility. This is evident in CO₂, which shows lower solubility in seawater (salinity ~35 ppt) compared to fresh water at the same temperature and pressure, with reductions up to 10-20% attributed to ionic hydration competition.[54] Pressure enhances solubility as per Henry's law, but this section focuses on gas-specific behaviors beyond general pressure effects. Practical examples illustrate these principles. In aquatic ecosystems, the oxygenation of water supports marine life, with dissolved oxygen levels critically dependent on temperature and salinity; warmer waters hold less oxygen, stressing fish and invertebrates in climate-altered habitats.[55] Similarly, carbonation of beverages relies on pressurizing CO₂ into liquids at low temperatures to achieve supersaturation, releasing bubbles upon decompression for effervescence. In a modern environmental context, oceans absorb approximately 23-30% of anthropogenic CO₂ emissions, buffering atmospheric levels but driving ocean acidification. Since the 1980s, surface ocean pH has declined by about 0.1 units (a 30% acidity increase), with 2020s data indicating sustained uptake rates of ~9-10 billion metric tons of CO₂ annually despite warming trends that reduce solubility per Henry's law. This has led to undersaturation of carbonate minerals, threatening calcifying organisms like corals and shellfish, as documented in recent global assessments.[56][57]

Ionic Compounds in Water

The solubility of ionic compounds in water arises from the balance between the energy required to disrupt the ionic lattice and the energy released through ion hydration. The lattice energy represents the strong electrostatic attractions holding ions together in the solid crystal, which must be overcome for dissolution to occur. In contrast, hydration energy is the exothermic process where water molecules surround and stabilize the separated ions via ion-dipole interactions. Ionic compounds are generally highly soluble if the magnitude of the hydration energy exceeds the lattice energy, resulting in a net favorable enthalpy change for dissolution.[16] For example, sodium chloride (NaCl) exhibits high solubility of approximately 360 g/L at 25°C, as its hydration energy sufficiently compensates for the lattice energy.[12] Empirical solubility rules provide guidelines for predicting the behavior of many ionic compounds in water, based on observed patterns. All nitrates (NO₃⁻) are soluble, regardless of the cation, due to the weak lattice forces in these salts. Carbonates (CO₃²⁻), however, are typically insoluble except when paired with alkali metal cations (e.g., Na⁺, K⁺) or ammonium (NH₄⁺), where the high hydration of these small, highly charged cations promotes dissolution. These rules stem from the interplay of ion sizes, charges, and hydration tendencies, allowing chemists to anticipate precipitation or solution formation without exhaustive experimentation.[58] The common ion effect further modulates solubility by introducing an ion already present in the equilibrium, shifting the dissolution process toward the solid phase per Le Chatelier's principle. For instance, the solubility of silver chloride (AgCl), which is sparingly soluble in pure water, decreases significantly in a solution containing chloride ions from sodium chloride (NaCl). The additional Cl⁻ ions suppress AgCl dissociation, reducing its molar solubility from about 1.3 × 10⁻⁵ M in pure water to ≈1.8 × 10^{-9} M in 0.10 M NaCl. This effect is crucial in qualitative analysis and precipitation reactions.[59] Certain ionic hydroxides display amphoteric behavior, dissolving in both acidic and basic conditions due to pH-dependent speciation. Aluminum hydroxide (Al(OH)₃) exemplifies this, with minimal solubility near neutral pH (around 6–8), where it precipitates as the neutral hydroxide. In acidic media (pH < 5), it dissolves by forming soluble aluminate ions or complexes like [Al(H₂O)₆]³⁺, while in basic media (pH > 9), it forms tetrahydroxoaluminate ions ([Al(OH)₄]⁻). This pH-dependent solubility curve reflects the compound's ability to act as either an acid or base, enhancing its utility in buffering and extraction processes.[60]

Organic Compounds in Solvents

The solubility of organic compounds in solvents is largely governed by the polarity of the solute and solvent, with polar functional groups facilitating dissolution in polar media like water through hydrogen bonding and dipole interactions.[61] Functional groups play a critical role in determining solubility patterns; for instance, the presence of a hydroxyl (-OH) group in alcohols enhances water solubility by enabling hydrogen bonding with water molecules, as seen in short-chain alcohols like ethanol.[62] In contrast, hydrocarbon moieties, being nonpolar, reduce solubility in water by limiting such interactions, making purely hydrocarbon-based compounds like alkanes nearly insoluble.[63] Other polar groups, such as amines or carboxylates, similarly promote solubility in aqueous solvents, while nonpolar groups like alkyl chains diminish it.[61] A key quantitative measure of an organic compound's hydrophobicity is the logarithm of the octanol-water partition coefficient (LogP), which indicates the distribution between a nonpolar (octanol) and polar (water) phase; values greater than 3 typically signify low water solubility and high lipophilicity, aiding predictions for pharmaceutical and environmental applications.[64] This metric correlates inversely with aqueous solubility, as higher LogP values reflect stronger partitioning into nonpolar environments.[65] Solubility trends in homologous series, such as alcohols, show a decrease with increasing chain length due to the growing dominance of hydrophobic alkyl portions over the polar hydroxyl group; methanol and ethanol are fully miscible in water, but solubility drops sharply for longer chains, with hexanol exhibiting limited solubility of about 5.9 g/100 mL at 20°C.[66] This pattern underscores the balance between polar and nonpolar contributions in molecular design.[67] To enhance solubility of poorly water-soluble organics, particularly drugs, cosolvents like ethanol are commonly added to aqueous systems, reducing the overall polarity and improving dissolution through mechanisms such as weakened water structure and increased solute-solvent interactions; for example, ethanol mixtures can increase ibuprofen solubility by up to 10-fold in pharmaceutical formulations.[68] This cosolvency approach is vital in drug delivery, enabling higher bioavailability without altering the active molecule.[69] Recent advancements emphasize bio-based green solvents as sustainable alternatives for dissolving organic compounds, addressing environmental concerns with traditional solvents; post-2020 developments include the use of bio-derived systems like ethyl lactate or cyrene for extracting lipophilic organics such as β-carotene, offering comparable solubility enhancements while being biodegradable and low-toxicity.[70] These solvents, often sourced from renewable feedstocks, support greener processes in industries like pharmaceuticals and fine chemicals.[71]

Solid Solutions and Alloys

Solid solutions in alloys represent a form of solubility where one metal (the solute) dissolves into the crystal lattice of another metal (the solvent) to form a homogeneous crystalline phase without phase separation. This occurs at the atomic level, enhancing material properties such as strength and ductility. Unlike liquid solutions, solid solubility is limited by thermodynamic factors and typically requires compatible atomic structures. There are two primary types: substitutional and interstitial solid solutions.[72][73] In substitutional solid solutions, solute atoms replace solvent atoms in the lattice sites, requiring similar atomic sizes and crystal structures for stability. A classic example is the copper-nickel (Cu-Ni) alloy, where nickel atoms substitute for copper in the face-centered cubic lattice, forming a complete solid solution across all compositions at elevated temperatures. Interstitial solid solutions, by contrast, involve small solute atoms occupying the voids (interstices) between larger solvent atoms, without displacing them. Carbon in iron exemplifies this, where carbon atoms fit into the octahedral sites of the body-centered cubic iron lattice in low-carbon steels, enabling limited solubility up to about 0.02 wt% at room temperature. These mechanisms allow alloys to achieve uniform properties but are constrained by the solute's size relative to the host lattice.[72][74][75] The extent of solid solubility is governed by the Hume-Rothery rules, empirical guidelines established in the 1930s that predict conditions for extensive substitutional solubility. These include: (1) a relative atomic size difference of less than 15% between solute and solvent; (2) similar crystal structures; (3) comparable electronegativities to ensure favorable bonding; and (4) the same valence electron count for electronic compatibility. For interstitial solubility, the solute must be significantly smaller (atomic radius ratio <0.59) to fit lattice gaps without excessive strain. These rules explain why elements like gold dissolve well in silver but not in magnesium, influencing alloy design for specific applications.[76][77] Phase diagrams for binary alloys illustrate solubility limits through key features like the solvus line and eutectic points. The solvus line demarcates the boundary between a single solid solution phase and a two-phase region of solid solutions plus precipitates, showing how maximum solute solubility decreases with falling temperature in many systems. For instance, in the Cu-Ni diagram, the solvus is absent due to complete solubility, but in Al-Cu, it defines the α-phase solubility limit. Eutectic points mark the lowest melting temperature where a liquid decomposes into two solid phases, often bounding limited solid solubility regions; the lead-tin (Pb-Sn) eutectic at 183°C exemplifies this, with minimal mutual solubility in the solids. Temperature dependence thus plays a critical role, as cooling below the solvus can drive precipitation and alter properties.[78] Applications of solid solutions leverage these principles for enhanced performance. In steel production, interstitial carbon forms solid solutions with iron, enabling solid solution strengthening where solute atoms distort the lattice and impede dislocation motion, increasing yield strength by up to 50% in low-alloy steels without brittleness. Substitutional alloys like austenitic stainless steel (Fe-Cr-Ni) use Hume-Rothery-compliant elements for corrosion resistance via uniform lattice integration. In modern nanomaterials, solid solution perovskites—such as doped ABO₃ structures like La₀.₈Sr₀.₂MnO₃—have advanced battery technologies by improving ionic conductivity in solid-state electrolytes; recent lattice-matched antiperovskite-perovskite interfaces achieve near-theoretical lithium-ion transport rates, boosting energy density in all-solid-state batteries toward commercialization by 2030. These developments highlight solid solutions' role in sustainable energy storage.[79][80][81]

Dissolution Dynamics

Rate of Dissolution

The rate of dissolution describes the kinetics by which a solid solute disperses into a solvent, approaching the equilibrium solubility concentration over time. This dynamic process is governed by mass transfer mechanisms and is distinct from the equilibrium solubility, which represents the maximum solute concentration achievable; for instance, a sparingly soluble compound in fine powder form can exhibit a rapid initial dissolution rate, quickly saturating the solution despite its low ultimate solubility. Several key factors influence the dissolution rate. Increasing the surface area of the solute, such as by using powdered rather than crystalline forms, directly enhances the rate by providing more sites for solvent interaction; for example, micronized aspirin tablets dissolve significantly faster across pH ranges of 1.2 to 6.8 compared to standard 500 mg tablets due to their greater surface area per unit mass.[82] Agitation of the solution accelerates dissolution by thinning the hydrodynamic boundary layer adjacent to the solute surface, thereby facilitating solute transport to the bulk solvent.[83] Temperature exerts a profound effect, as higher temperatures increase both the solute's saturation concentration and the molecular diffusion coefficient, with the temperature dependence of the rate constant following the Arrhenius equation $ k = A e^{-E_a / RT} $, where $ A $ is the pre-exponential factor, $ E_a $ is the activation energy, $ R $ is the gas constant, and $ T $ is the absolute temperature; in dissolution studies of minerals like quartz, activation energies around 89 kJ/mol have been reported, illustrating the exponential sensitivity to temperature.[84] The foundational mathematical model for dissolution kinetics is the Noyes-Whitney equation, originally derived from experiments on solids dissolving in their own solutions:
dCdt=DAhV(CsC) \frac{dC}{dt} = \frac{D A}{h V} (C_s - C)
Here, $ \frac{dC}{dt} $ is the rate of change of solute concentration in the bulk solution, $ D $ is the diffusion coefficient of the solute, $ A $ is the surface area of the exposed solid, $ h $ is the thickness of the diffusion boundary layer, $ V $ is the volume of the solvent, $ C_s $ is the saturation solubility, and $ C $ is the current bulk concentration. This equation highlights that dissolution is often diffusion-controlled under typical conditions, with the driving force being the concentration gradient across the boundary layer. The dissolution process unfolds in sequential stages: first, detachment of solute molecules or ions from the solid lattice at the interface; second, diffusion of these detached species through the unstirred boundary layer to the bulk solution; and third, solvation, where solvent molecules surround and stabilize the solute particles. In many pharmaceutical applications, such as the disintegration of aspirin tablets in aqueous media, the diffusion stage predominates as the rate-limiting step, particularly for poorly water-soluble drugs, emphasizing the importance of formulation strategies to optimize boundary layer dynamics and surface exposure.[85]

Incongruent Dissolution Processes

Incongruent dissolution refers to the process in which a solid solute partially reacts or decomposes during dissolution, resulting in a saturated solution whose composition differs from that of the original solid, accompanied by the formation of a new solid phase that is typically more stable under the given conditions. Unlike congruent dissolution, where the solid fully dissolves into its constituent ions in stoichiometric proportions, incongruent dissolution involves selective dissolution of components, leading to secondary precipitates or altered solid residues. This phenomenon is common in multicomponent systems, such as hydrated salts or silicates, where environmental factors like pH, temperature, or ion activity drive the reaction toward phase separation.[86] This process is influenced by water activity and temperature in systems like hydrated calcium sulfates, where a less soluble anhydrous phase may form as a residue. Hydrolysis in certain ionic compounds can also lead to precipitation of hydroxides due to local pH changes. Efflorescence in hydrated salts, where crystals lose water to form less hydrated phases upon exposure to dry air, represents a related transformation without full dissolution.[87][88][89] The Gibbs phase rule, F = C - P + 2, where F is the degrees of freedom, C is the number of components, and P is the number of phases, governs these systems, particularly in condensed solid-liquid equilibria without vapor involvement (effectively F = C - P + 1). In incongruent dissolution, the presence of multiple solid phases (e.g., original solute and precipitate) alongside the liquid solution often results in invariant or univariant conditions, limiting the system's variability and dictating the equilibrium compositions. For instance, in a binary system like a hydrated salt-water, the coexistence of multiple solid phases and saturated solution creates an invariant point. In industrial contexts, incongruent dissolution plays a critical role in cement hydration, where calcium silicate hydrate (C-S-H) gels, the primary binding phase in Portland cement, dissolve non-stoichiometrically during leaching or degradation, preferentially releasing calcium while leaving a silica-enriched residue, which affects long-term durability and radionuclide retention in waste repositories. In soil chemistry and geochemistry, incongruent processes drive mineral weathering, such as the partial dissolution of feldspars to form secondary clays like kaolinite, influencing nutrient cycling, soil fertility, and carbon sequestration; studies on silicate weathering highlight silica retention in soils, impacting global geochemical fluxes.[90][91]

Theoretical Models of Solubility

Like Dissolves Like Principle

The "like dissolves like" principle is an empirical guideline in chemistry stating that substances with similar intermolecular forces tend to be mutually soluble, while those with dissimilar forces are typically immiscible. This rule arises from observations that polar solutes dissolve preferentially in polar solvents and nonpolar solutes in nonpolar solvents, due to comparable cohesive energies that minimize the energy change upon mixing. The principle originated as qualitative observations by early chemists studying solution behavior, but it was formalized quantitatively through the Hildebrand solubility parameter in the 1930s. Joel H. Hildebrand introduced this parameter, δ, defined as the square root of the cohesive energy density:
δ=ΔHvRTVm \delta = \sqrt{\frac{\Delta H_v - RT}{V_m}}
where ΔH_v is the molar heat of vaporization, R is the gas constant, T is temperature, and V_m is the molar volume; at room temperature, the RT term is often negligible, simplifying to δ ≈ sqrt(ΔH_v / V_m). Solubility is favored when the δ values of solute and solvent differ by less than about 2 (cal/cm³)^{1/2}, reflecting similar intermolecular attractions.[92] This parameter finds practical applications in predicting the miscibility of polymers and organic compounds in solvents. For instance, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), with δ ≈ 9.6 (cal/cm³)^{1/2}, dissolves readily in tetrahydrofuran (THF), which has δ ≈ 9.1 (cal/cm³)^{1/2}, due to their closely matched values that facilitate uniform mixing in coatings and adhesives. Such predictions guide solvent selection in industries like pharmaceuticals and paints, where matching δ values ensures effective dissolution without phase separation.[92] Despite its utility for nonpolar systems, the principle has limitations in cases involving specific interactions, such as hydrogen bonding or ionic dissociation, where the single δ parameter cannot capture directional or charge-based forces. For example, it inadequately predicts solubility in protic solvents like water for solutes with strong hydrogen bonding, as the parameter overlooks polarity gradients.[92] To address these shortcomings, Charles M. Hansen extended the Hildebrand approach in 1967 by decomposing δ into three components: dispersion (δ_d) for van der Waals forces, polar (δ_p) for dipole-dipole interactions, and hydrogen-bonding (δ_h) for donor-acceptor bonds, with the total δ_t = sqrt(δ_d² + δ_p² + δ_h²). This Hansen solubility parameter framework improves accuracy for complex systems, such as polymers with mixed interactions, by calculating a multidimensional "distance" between solute and solvent parameters; solubility occurs when this distance is below a material-specific radius.

Solubility Product Constant

The solubility product constant, denoted $ K_{sp} $, is the equilibrium constant for the dissolution of a sparingly soluble ionic compound in water, quantifying the extent to which the solid dissociates into its constituent ions at equilibrium.[93] For a general ionic compound $ A_m B_n(s) \rightleftharpoons m A^{m+}(aq) + n B^{n-}(aq) $, the expression is $ K_{sp} = [A^{m+}]^m [B^{n-}]^n $, where concentrations are in moles per liter and activities are approximated by concentrations for dilute solutions.[93] This constant is characteristic of each compound at a given temperature and serves as a measure of its solubility under equilibrium conditions.[21] To calculate the solubility of a 1:1 electrolyte like silver chloride ($ \ce{AgCl(s) \rightleftharpoons Ag+(aq) + Cl-(aq)} $), where $ K_{sp} = [\ce{Ag+}] [\ce{Cl-}] = 1.8 \times 10^{-10} $ at 25°C, let $ s $ be the molar solubility; then $ [\ce{Ag+}] = s $ and $ [\ce{Cl-}] = s $, yielding $ K_{sp} = s^2 $ and $ s = \sqrt{K_{sp}} = \sqrt{1.8 \times 10^{-10}} \approx 1.3 \times 10^{-5} $ M.[94][21] For compounds with different stoichiometries, such as $ \ce{CaF2(s) \rightleftharpoons Ca^{2+}(aq) + 2F-(aq)} $, the expression becomes $ K_{sp} = [ \ce{Ca^{2+}} ] [ \ce{F-} ]^2 = s (2s)^2 = 4s^3 $, so $ s = \sqrt[3]{K_{sp}/4} $.[93] The presence of a common ion suppresses solubility, as described by Le Châtelier's principle, shifting the equilibrium toward the undissolved solid. For instance, in a solution containing 0.10 M $ \ce{NaCl} $, the solubility of $ \ce{AgCl} $ decreases because added $ \ce{Cl-} $ increases $ [\ce{Cl-}] $, requiring a lower $ s $ to maintain $ K_{sp} $; solving $ 1.8 \times 10^{-10} = s (0.10 + s) \approx s \times 0.10 $ gives $ s \approx 1.8 \times 10^{-9} $ M, far less than in pure water.[95] Precipitation occurs when the ion product $ Q = [A^{m+}]^m [B^{n-}]^n $ exceeds $ K_{sp} $, indicating a supersaturated solution that will form a solid until equilibrium is reached. If $ Q < K_{sp} $, the solution is unsaturated and no precipitate forms; if $ Q = K_{sp} $, it is saturated.[96] This criterion is used to predict whether mixing solutions will result in insolubility, such as when combining silver nitrate and sodium chloride exceeds $ K_{sp} $ for $ \ce{AgCl} $.[96] The value of $ K_{sp} $ depends on temperature, following the van't Hoff equation, where endothermic dissolution increases $ K_{sp} $ with rising temperature, while exothermic processes decrease it. For calcium carbonate ($ \ce{CaCO3(s) \rightleftharpoons Ca^{2+}(aq) + CO3^{2-}(aq)} $), solubility decreases with increasing temperature, with the temperature derivative of calcite solubility ranging from $ -10^{-6} $ to $ -3 \times 10^{-5} $ molal/°C at constant CO₂ pressure, reflecting its exothermic nature.[97][97]

Advanced Theories and Extensions

The Debye-Hückel theory addresses deviations from ideality in electrolyte solutions by modeling the electrostatic interactions surrounding each ion as an ionic atmosphere, which screens the central ion's charge and reduces its effective activity. Developed by Peter Debye and Erich Hückel in 1923, this theory applies primarily to dilute solutions where interionic forces dominate over short-range interactions.[98] In the limiting case for very low concentrations, the mean activity coefficient γ±\gamma_\pm for a single charge type is given by:
logγ±=0.51z+zI \log \gamma_\pm = -0.51 |z_+ z_-| \sqrt{I}
where z+z_+ and zz_- are the ion charges, II is the ionic strength, and the constant 0.51 is specific to aqueous solutions at 25°C. This equation corrects the solubility product constant KspK_{sp} for non-ideal behavior, enabling more accurate predictions of ionic solubility in low-concentration regimes. Extensions like the Davies equation incorporate higher-order terms for moderate concentrations, but the core theory remains foundational for interpreting ion pairing and activity in sparingly soluble salts. Regular solution theory, introduced by Joel H. Hildebrand in 1929, extends the concept of solubility to nonpolar and weakly polar organic compounds by assuming random mixing without volume change or heat of mixing beyond dispersion forces. It posits that solubility arises from the balance between cohesive energies in solute and solvent, quantified through solubility parameters δ\delta, where miscibility is favored when δ1δ2\delta_1 \approx \delta_2.[99] The theory predicts the activity coefficient γ\gamma via:
RTlnγ=V(δ1δ2)2ϕ22 RT \ln \gamma = V (\delta_1 - \delta_2)^2 \phi_2^2
with VV as the molar volume of the solute, ϕ2\phi_2 as the volume fraction, and δ\delta as the Hildebrand solubility parameter derived from cohesive energy density. This framework has been widely applied to predict phase behavior in nonpolar solvents, such as hydrocarbon mixtures, though it underperforms for systems with hydrogen bonding or polar interactions due to neglected specific forces. Hildebrand's work laid the groundwork for later thermodynamic models in chemical engineering. For polymeric systems, the Flory-Huggins theory, independently formulated by Paul J. Flory and Morris L. Huggins in 1941-1942, describes the thermodynamics of polymer-solvent mixtures using a lattice model that accounts for the large size disparity between components. The free energy of mixing ΔGm\Delta G_m is expressed as:
ΔGmRT=n1lnϕ1+n2lnϕ2+χn1ϕ1ϕ2 \frac{\Delta G_m}{RT} = n_1 \ln \phi_1 + n_2 \ln \phi_2 + \chi n_1 \phi_1 \phi_2
where n1n_1 and n2n_2 are the numbers of solvent and polymer molecules, ϕ1\phi_1 and ϕ2\phi_2 are their volume fractions, and χ\chi is the Flory-Huggins interaction parameter reflecting enthalpic contributions. This model highlights the entropic penalty of polymer chain confinement, predicting lower critical solution temperatures for many polymer blends and guiding solubility in applications like coatings and drug delivery. Limitations arise from its mean-field approximation, which overlooks chain connectivity and concentration gradients. Group contribution methods like UNIFAC, developed by Aa. Fredenslund, R.L. Jones, and J.M. Prausnitz in 1975, enable predictive calculations of activity coefficients for complex organic mixtures by decomposing molecules into functional groups and assigning interaction parameters based on experimental data. The model combines a combinatorial term for size and shape effects with a residual term for group-group energies, allowing estimation of solubility without pure-component data.[100] UNIFAC has been extended to over 100 main groups, improving predictions for vapor-liquid equilibria and liquid-liquid separations in industrial processes.[101] In the 2020s, artificial intelligence and machine learning approaches have emerged as powerful extensions for solubility prediction, particularly in drug discovery, where traditional models struggle with diverse chemical spaces. Graph neural networks and random forests trained on large datasets like ESOL and AQUA achieve root-mean-square errors around 0.6 log units for aqueous solubility, often outperforming group contribution methods for novel compounds by learning implicit molecular features.[102] These models integrate quantum descriptors and experimental assays to accelerate lead optimization, as demonstrated in high-throughput screening for pharmaceuticals, reducing reliance on costly syntheses. Hybrid AI-UNIFAC frameworks further enhance predictive power by combining data-driven learning with physicochemical rules.[103] Despite these advances, ideal assumptions in basic theories fail in concentrated solutions, where short-range interactions, ion pairing, and non-Coulombic forces lead to significant deviations; for instance, Debye-Hückel overestimates screening at ionic strengths above 0.1 M, necessitating specific-ion models like Pitzer equations for accurate solubility in brines or biological fluids. Regular solution and Flory-Huggins theories similarly break down in associating systems, highlighting the need for multiscale simulations to capture solvation dynamics.[99]

Practical Aspects and Predictions

Key Applications

In the pharmaceutical industry, solubility plays a pivotal role in drug formulation and delivery, particularly for poorly water-soluble compounds that constitute over 40% of new drug candidates. Amorphous forms of drugs, which lack the ordered crystal lattice of their crystalline counterparts, exhibit significantly higher solubility due to their higher free energy state, enabling enhanced dissolution rates and improved bioavailability. Converting a drug to its amorphous state can theoretically increase solubility by factors up to 10- to 100-fold for various compounds, though practical enhancements are often lower due to recrystallization tendencies. Studies on carbamazepine using solid dispersions have shown increases of 2- to 5-fold, thereby facilitating better absorption in the gastrointestinal tract and achieving therapeutic plasma concentrations. This approach is widely adopted in solid dispersions and spray-dried formulations to overcome bioavailability limitations, directly impacting the efficacy of oral medications.[104][29][105] Environmental applications of solubility concepts are crucial for pollutant remediation and water treatment. In soil remediation, the solubility of heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, and arsenic increases under acidic conditions (pH below 7), facilitating their leaching from contaminated sites but also enabling targeted extraction through chelation or phytoremediation techniques. For example, bio-chelate assisted leaching enhances the mobilization of metals like copper and zinc by adjusting pH and using organic agents to form soluble complexes, allowing for their removal and reducing groundwater contamination risks. In water treatment processes, solubility governs the precipitation of soluble impurities; lime softening and coagulation-flocculation methods exploit solubility products to convert dissolved ions like calcium, magnesium, and phosphates into insoluble precipitates, which are then settled and filtered to produce potable water. These strategies are essential for treating industrial effluents and municipal wastewater, preventing the spread of toxic solubilized contaminants.[106][107][108][109] Differential solubility under varying conditions, such as temperature, underpins separation techniques like fractional crystallization, which is used to purify compounds from mixtures. A classic example is the separation of potassium nitrate (KNO₃) from sodium chloride (NaCl) in aqueous solutions: KNO₃ has a highly temperature-dependent solubility—increasing dramatically from about 13 g/100 mL at 0°C to 247 g/100 mL at 100°C—while NaCl's solubility remains relatively constant at around 36 g/100 mL. By dissolving the mixture in hot water and cooling the solution, KNO₃ crystallizes preferentially due to its reduced solubility at lower temperatures, allowing for its isolation with high purity, a method applied in chemical manufacturing and laboratory purification. This principle extends to industrial processes for isolating salts and organics, leveraging solubility gradients to achieve efficient separations without complex equipment.[110][111] In food and chemical processing, solubility drives extraction techniques for isolating valuable components from raw materials. Solvent extraction relies on the differential solubility of target solutes, such as oils, flavors, or bioactive compounds, in immiscible solvents like hexane or ethanol, enabling selective partitioning from complex matrices like seeds or herbs. For instance, in edible oil production, solvents are chosen based on Hansen solubility parameters to maximize the extraction of lipids while minimizing unwanted polar impurities, yielding high-purity products with efficiencies up to 99%. These methods are integral to food safety and quality control, ensuring the removal of contaminants or concentration of nutrients. Additionally, in the context of environmental impacts, ocean deoxygenation—exacerbated by climate-driven warming—reduces the solubility of oxygen in seawater, with projections indicating a 3-4% decline in dissolved oxygen by 2100 under high-emission scenarios, leading to expanded hypoxic zones that threaten marine ecosystems and fisheries as of 2025 assessments.[112][113][114]

Methods for Solubility Prediction

Methods for predicting solubility encompass empirical correlations, theoretical frameworks, and computational models that estimate solubility parameters without direct experimentation. These approaches are essential in fields like pharmaceutical development and chemical engineering, where rapid screening of compounds is required. Empirical methods rely on observed patterns from experimental data, while theoretical and computational techniques incorporate molecular properties and interactions for broader applicability. Empirical predictions often draw from solubility rules for inorganic salts, such as the observation that nitrates are generally soluble in water, or from databases compiling experimental solubilities for quick lookups. For organic compounds, a prominent example is Yalkowsky's General Solubility Equation (GSE), which estimates aqueous solubility based on melting point and lipophilicity. The GSE is expressed as:
logSw=0.50.01(Tm25)logP \log S_w = 0.5 - 0.01(T_m - 25) - \log P
where $ S_w $ is the molar solubility in water, $ T_m $ is the melting point in °C, and $ P $ is the octanol-water partition coefficient.[115] This equation has been validated on over 1,000 non-electrolytes, achieving mean absolute errors around 0.6 log units, though it assumes ideal melting behavior and performs less accurately for polar solutes.[116] Databases like AQUASOL and those derived from PubChem provide foundational data for such empirical models, enabling parameter fitting for specific compound classes.[115] Theoretical methods, such as the Conductor-like Screening Model for Real Solvents (COSMO-RS), offer a physics-based approach to predict activity coefficients and thus solubility in various solvents. COSMO-RS computes chemical potentials from quantum mechanical surface charge densities obtained via density functional theory calculations, accounting for electrostatic, hydrogen-bonding, and van der Waals interactions without empirical parameterization for specific systems. This model excels in multicomponent mixtures and has been applied to predict infinite dilution activity coefficients with average deviations of 0.2-0.5 log units for organic solutes in ionic liquids and aqueous systems.[117] Its predictive power stems from treating solvents as ensembles of interacting segments, making it suitable for screening novel compounds. Computational techniques have advanced significantly with quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) models and machine learning algorithms. QSAR approaches correlate solubility with molecular descriptors like molecular weight, polar surface area, and topological indices, often using partial least squares regression on datasets of drug-like compounds.[118] These models achieve root mean square errors (RMSE) of 0.5-1.0 log units on external test sets, providing interpretable insights into structural influences on solubility. In the 2020s, machine learning innovations, including graph neural networks trained on large PubChem-derived datasets exceeding 10,000 compounds, have improved accuracy for organic molecules by capturing complex three-dimensional features. Recent hybrid approaches, combining COSMO-RS with machine learning as of 2024, have further improved accuracy with RMSE values around 0.4 log units for drug-like compounds.[119][120] For instance, residual gated graph neural networks have reported RMSE values below 0.6 log units, addressing limitations in traditional QSAR by handling diverse chemical spaces without explicit featurization.[121] Validation of these prediction methods involves rigorous comparison against experimental data from curated databases, with performance metrics like mean absolute error (MAE) and RMSE quantifying accuracy across diverse compound sets. Empirical and QSAR models often underperform for outliers due to assumptions about molecular ideality, while COSMO-RS and machine learning methods show robustness but can introduce errors from quantum calculation approximations or training data biases. A key error source is polymorphism, where different crystal forms alter lattice energy and thus solubility by up to 30-fold, necessitating form-specific predictions to align with experiments.[122] Overall, hybrid approaches combining theoretical and data-driven elements are emerging to minimize discrepancies, with ongoing benchmarks emphasizing the need for standardized validation protocols.[123]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.