difference between electrolytic conductivity and molar conductivity with respect to concentration.
Answers
Explanation:
Conductivity is the conductance per unit volume of the solution; it may also be considered as the concentration of ions per unit volume of solution. Molar Conductivity is the conductance of the entire solution having 1 mole of electrolyte dissolved in it.
Electrolytic conductivity and molar conductivity are both measures of the capability of an electrolyte result to conduct electricity, but they differ in the way that they depend on the attention of the electrolyte. Electrolytic conductivity depends on the attention of the electrolyte in a direct manner, while molar conductivity takes into account the number of ions present and decreases as attention increases due to ion- ion relations and crowding goods.
Electrolytic conductivity:
- Electrolytic conductivity is a measure of the capability of a result to conduct electricity.
- It depends on the attention of the electrolyte in the result.
- As the attention of the electrolyte increases, the electrolytic conductivity of the result also increases.
- The relationship between electrolytic conductivity and attention is direct.
- The unit of electrolytic conductivity is typically siemens per meter (S/m).
Molar conductivity:
- Molar conductivity is a measure of the conductivity of a result that takes into account the number of ions present in the result.
- It's defined as the conductivity of a result containing one operative of electrolyte dissolved in one liter of result.
- Molar conductivity depends on the attention of the electrolyte, but the relationship isn't direct.
- As the attention of the electrolyte increases, the molar conductivity of the result decreases due to the increase in ion- ion relations and crowding goods.
- Molar conductivity is expressed in units of siemens per meter squared per mole (S m^2/mol).
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