Chemistry, asked by sabbahkhan, 1 year ago

explain raoult's law

Answers

Answered by Benny11
1
Raoult 's law is a law of thermodynamic established by French chemist Francois - Marie Raoult in 1887. It states that the partial vapor pressure of each component of an ideal mixture of liquids is equal to the vapor pressure of the pure component multiplied by its mole fraction in the mixture .
Answered by keerthanabkvrl
1
In the 1880s, French chemist François-Marie Raoult discovered that when a substance is dissolved in a solution, the vapor pressure of the solution will generally decrease. This observation depends on two variables:
the mole fraction of the amount of dissolved solute present and the original vapor pressure (pure solvent).
At any given temperature for a particular solid or liquid, there is a pressure at which the vapor formed above the substance is in dynamic equilibrium with its liquid or solid form. This is the vapor pressure of the substance at that temperature. At equilibrium, the rate at which the solid or liquid evaporates is equal to the rate that the gas is condensing back to its original form. All solids and liquids have a vapor pressure, and this pressure is constant regardless of how much of the substance is present.

Raoult's Law only works for ideal solutions. "An ideal solution shows thermodynamic mixing characteristics identical to those of ideal gas mixtures except ideal solutions have intermolecular interactions equal to those of the pure components." Like many other concepts explored in Chemistry, Raoult's Law only applies under ideal conditions in an ideal solution. However, it still works fairly well for the solvent in dilute solutions. In reality though, the decrease in vapor pressure will be greater than that calculated by Raoult's Law for extremely dilute solutions.
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