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"Partial molar [property]" is usually used to reflect non-ideality in solutions. That is because real solvent molecules interact (to some extent) with solute molecules differently than they interact with other solvent molecules. So, the property is a function of concentration (rather than independent as per an ideal solution). e.g., 1 L ethanol + 1 L water should equal 2 L of solution, but it doesn't in the real world (it's slightly less).

I'm not sure of the significance of "heat of solution of solvent and solute" except that it may be specifying the concentration dependence of a particular solute-solvent system.

2006-08-21 04:08:26 · answer #1 · answered by ChemDoc 3 · 0 0

Partial Molar Property

2016-12-17 16:33:34 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Soluble some thing it relatively is waiting to dissolve in a solvent. Insoluble some thing that's no longer waiting to dissolve in a undeniable SOLVENT. (some chemical aspects won't dissolve in water to makes AQUEOUS strategies yet will dissolve in organic and organic solvents.a solid occasion of that's the ingredient IODINE.) "Iodine answer" is iodine dissolved as an iodide in many situations in alcohol. Solvent a liquid wherein some thing could be dissolved. Solute a chemical which would be dissolved in a undeniable solvent. The lacking observe is possibly answer. this gives the observe equation: Solute + solvent = answer. a answer is subsequently a sturdy dissolved in a liquid.

2016-12-11 12:36:59 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

need to know context. partial molar heats are used to sum up a reaction. parts added up gives the molar heat of compound(s)

2006-08-21 06:59:23 · answer #4 · answered by shiara_blade 6 · 0 1

Good question, but you're asking the wrong bunch of people on this site.

2006-08-21 03:51:57 · answer #5 · answered by Texan 6 · 0 1

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