Chemistry, asked by eminemifyme8095, 1 month ago

Colligative properties are obeyed when the solute is non electrolyte and also when the solution are dilute

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Answered by shifa142004
1

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Colligative properties are obeyed when the solute is non electrolyte and also when the solution are dilute

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Answered by ArunSivaPrakash
2

The given statement "colligative properties are obeyed when the solute is non-electrolyte and also when the solution is dilute" is true.

  • Electrolytes that have a higher capacity of disassociation than non-electrolytes provide more solutes to the solution, which in turn effects a change in the colligative properties of the same.
  • Some characteristics of a non-volatile solute present in a diluted solution depend solely on the quantity of solute particles present.
  • Colligative properties are those of a solution that depend on the ratio of the total number of solute particles to the total number of solvent particles while being unaffected by the chemical make-up of the solution's constituent parts.
  • Temperature has an impact on a molecule's colligative properties.
  • Boiling point elevation, freezing point depression, relative reduction of vapour pressure, and osmotic pressure are the four colligative properties that a solution might display.
  • The Van't Hoff Factor is a mathematical expression that compares a solution's observed colligative properties to its hypothesised colligative properties.

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