Temperature effect Solubility is sensitive to changes in
temperature. For example, sugar is more soluble in hot water than cool water. It occurs because solubility products, like other types of equilibrium constants, are functions of temperature. In accordance with
Le Chatelier's Principle, when the dissolution process is
endothermic (heat is absorbed), solubility increases with rising temperature. This effect is the basis for the process of
recrystallization, which can be used to purify a chemical compound. When dissolution is
exothermic (heat is released) solubility decreases with rising temperature.
Sodium sulfate shows increasing solubility with temperature below about 32.4 °C, but a decreasing solubility at higher temperature. This is because the solid phase is the decahydrate () below the transition temperature, but a different hydrate above that temperature. The dependence on temperature of solubility for an ideal solution (achieved for low solubility substances) is given by the following expression containing the enthalpy of melting, Δ
mH, and the mole fraction x_i of the solute at saturation: \left(\frac{\partial \ln x_i}{\partial T} \right)_P = \frac{\bar{H}_{i,\mathrm{aq}}-H_{i,\mathrm{cr}}}{RT^2} where \bar{H}_{i,\mathrm{aq}} is the
partial molar enthalpy of the solute at infinite dilution and H_{i,\mathrm{cr}} the enthalpy per mole of the pure crystal. This differential expression for a non-electrolyte can be integrated on a temperature interval to give: \ln x_i=\frac{\Delta _m H_i}{R} \left(\frac 1 {T_f} - \frac{1}{T} \right) For nonideal solutions activity of the solute at saturation appears instead of
mole fraction solubility in the derivative with respect to temperature: \left(\frac{\partial \ln a_i}{\partial T} \right)_P= \frac{H_{i,\mathrm{aq}}-H_{i,\mathrm{cr}}}{RT^2}
Common-ion effect The
common-ion effect is the effect of decreased solubility of one salt when another salt that has an ion in common with it is also present. For example, the solubility of
silver chloride, AgCl, is lowered when sodium chloride, a source of the common ion chloride, is added to a suspension of AgCl in water. \mathrm{AgCl(s) \leftrightharpoons Ag^+ (aq) + Cl^- (aq) } The solubility,
S, in the absence of a common ion can be calculated as follows. The concentrations [Ag+] and [Cl−] are equal because one mole of AgCl would dissociate into one mole of Ag+ and one mole of Cl−. Let the concentration of [Ag+(aq)] be denoted by
x. Then K_\mathrm{sp}=\mathrm{[Ag^+] [Cl^-]}= x^2 \text{Solubility} = \mathrm{[Ag^+]=[Cl^-]} = x = \sqrt{K_\mathrm{sp}}
Ksp for AgCl is equal to at 25 °C, so the solubility is . Now suppose that sodium chloride is also present, at a concentration of 0.01 mol dm−3 = 0.01 M. The solubility, ignoring any possible effect of the sodium ions, is now calculated by K_\mathrm{sp}=\mathrm{[Ag^+] [Cl^-]}=x(0.01 \,\text{M} + x) This is a
quadratic equation in
x, which is also equal to the solubility. x^2 + 0.01 \, \text{M}\, x - K_{sp} = 0 In the case of silver chloride,
x2 is very much smaller than 0.01 M
x, so the first term can be ignored. Therefore \text{Solubility}=\mathrm{[Ag^+]} = x = \frac{K_\mathrm{sp}}{0.01 \,\text{M}} = \mathrm{1.77 \times 10^{-8} \, mol \, dm^{-3}} a considerable reduction from . In
gravimetric analysis for silver, the reduction in solubility due to the common ion effect is used to ensure "complete" precipitation of AgCl.
Particle size effect The thermodynamic solubility constant is defined for large monocrystals. Solubility will increase with decreasing size of solute particle (or droplet) because of the additional surface energy. This effect is generally small unless particles become very small, typically smaller than 1 μm. The effect of the particle size on solubility constant can be quantified as follows: \log(^*K_{A}) = \log(^*K_{A \to 0}) + \frac{\gamma A_\mathrm{m}} {3.454RT} where *
KA is the solubility constant for the solute particles with the molar surface area
A, *
KA→0 is the solubility constant for substance with molar surface area tending to zero (i.e., when the particles are large),
γ is the
surface tension of the solute particle in the solvent,
Am is the molar surface area of the solute (in m2/mol),
R is the
universal gas constant, and
T is the
absolute temperature.
Salt effects The salt effects (
salting in and
salting-out) refers to the fact that the presence of a salt which has
no ion in common with the solute, has an effect on the
ionic strength of the solution and hence on
activity coefficients, so that the equilibrium constant, expressed as a concentration quotient, changes.
Phase effect Equilibria are defined for specific crystal
phases. Therefore, the solubility product is expected to be different depending on the phase of the solid. For example,
aragonite and
calcite will have different solubility products even though they have both the same chemical identity (
calcium carbonate). Under any given conditions one phase will be thermodynamically more stable than the other; therefore, this phase will form when
thermodynamic equilibrium is established. However, kinetic factors may favor the formation the unfavorable precipitate (e.g. aragonite), which is then said to be in a
metastable state. In pharmacology, the metastable state is sometimes referred to as amorphous state. Amorphous drugs have higher solubility than their crystalline counterparts due to the absence of long-distance interactions inherent in crystal lattice. Thus, it takes less energy to solvate the molecules in amorphous phase.
The effect of amorphous phase on solubility is widely used to make drugs more soluble.
Pressure effect 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: \left(\frac{\partial \ln x_i}{\partial P} \right)_T = -\frac{\bar{V}_{i,\mathrm{aq}}-V_{i,\mathrm{cr}}} {RT} where x_i is the mole fraction of the i-th component in the solution, P is the pressure, T is the absolute temperature, \bar{V}_{i,\text{aq}} is the
partial molar volume of the ith component in the solution, V_{i,\text{cr}} is the partial molar volume of the ith component in the dissolving solid, and R is the
universal gas constant. 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. ==Quantitative aspects==