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In most cases when we talk about dissolution we mean "solid disappears into the solution and there are no obvious signs of chemical reaction occurring". Yes, it is rather handwavy.
I think some people would say, NaCl breaking into its ions, isn't forming a new substance.. and even though it is technically a chemical reaction.. 'cos even dissolving can be endothermic or exothermic.. it still gets classed as a physical change(at least in basic chemistry which makes the distinction between chemical and physical change)..
But I think there is a chemical reality that an ionic compound breaking into its ions, or covalent compound breaking into ions(as some polar covalent might), or a covalent compound breaking into molecules, And not forming something else. And what it breaks into , forming a solution and that involves also getting solvated. That's dissolving..
CaO I think reacts to form a suspension of CaOH_2 (and I suppose partly a solution of Ca^2+ + 2OH-) but because it forms something else(The O^2- of it reacting with H2O to form 2OH-), many would say it doesn't dissolve. Plus with the suspension part, the word dissolve wouldn't be used, from what I understand, and the suspension is the bulk of it. And the solution would be Ca^2+ + 2OH- so one would say CaOH_2(s) dissolves. But not CaO.
Na2O forms a solution of 2Na+ + 2OH- But since the Na2O has become a solution, not of sodium oxide, but a solution of sodium hydroxide, Na2O reacted to form something else, and the something else dissolved. So the Na2O didn't dissolve.
When it comes to HCl, it's an unusual one 'cos HCl reacts but people still use the word dissolves. I think maybe that is because people often write HCl ---> H+(aq) + Cl-(aq) Even though the H+(aq) is really H3O+(aq). But since they write HCl solution like that, as if it didn't react(into something else), they speak of it as if it didn't react into something else, "solution of hydrogen chloride" and just say it dissolved .. Perhaps if they were to not write H+(aq) and if they were to call it solution of hydronium chloride, then they'd not say it dissolved. So HCl is often modelled as if it dissolves eg like NaCl. (unlike Na2O where people say it reacts rather than it dissolves 'cos with Na2O, we know O^2-(aq) doesn't exist, but also nobody writes O^2-(aq) and claims it's a shorthand for OH- , nobody writes O^2-(aq) at all. In contrast, with HCl, H+(aq) doesn't exist but people write it as if it does, or as a shorthand for H3O+(aq) . So they model HCl as if it were a salt, but that custum/convention hasn't been used with Na2O and so the language of "dissolving"/"solubility", gets applied to HCl but not to Na2O ).
Do you think that understanding of the term "dissolving" is right.. And alternative to the handwavy "solid disappears into the solution and there are no obvious signs of chemical reaction occurring"?
I spoke to two chemists that took the view that NaCl dissolves(we'd all agree on that, but I include it to make a point), Na2O doesn't dissolve 'cos it reacts to form another compound, and that compound it reacts into dissolves. Na2O dissolving would mean getting Na+ + O^2- which we don't get. HCl they thought maybe an inconsistency, 'cos it does react to form something else, H3O+ is formed in a reaction. BUT, I think that can be answered in that it is often modelled as if it dissolves in the manner that NaCl does, of just dissociating/splitting up. It's modelled as if there's no reaction forming anything different, so, as if H+(aq) exists. HCl --> H+(aq) + Cl-(aq)
And NH3 dissolves because it breaks up into molecules, and while there is a reaction NH3+H2O-->NH4+ + OH-, the equilibrium is to the left, there isn't much NH4+ + OH-.. There's enough for a pH test to pick up the high proportion of OH- relative to H+ but the vast bulk of what is there is NH3. So, solution of NH3.. and the reaction to NH4+ + OH-, can in some sense be considered insignificant 'cos there's so little NH4+ + OH-.
So I think dissolving is where the substance breaks into either ions, or molecules, and forms a solution of that substance. Not reacting to form something else. (with slight inconsistency with HCl but only because it often gets modelled as if it doesn't react to form something else). What do you think of that as a definition/explanation of the meaning of the term "dissolving"? (as opposed to "solid disappears into the solution and there are no obvious signs of chemical reaction occurring")?
Thanks