Chemistry, asked by Anonymous, 11 months ago

explain van't hoff factor ?????​

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Answered by megha200515
2

Answer:

What is the Van’t Hoff Factor?

The Van’t Hoff factor offers insight on the effect of solutes on the colligative properties of solutions. It is denoted by the symbol ‘i’. The Van’t Hoff factor can be defined as the ratio of the concentration of particles formed when a substance is dissolved to the concentration of the substance by mass.

The extent to which a substance associates or dissociates in a solution is described by the Van’t Hoff factor. For example, when a non-electrolytic substance is dissolved in water, the value of i is generally 1. However, when an ionic compound forms a solution in water, the value of i is equal to the total number of ions present in one formula unit of the substance.

Answered by arpanbhowmick2
0

Answer:

An emulsion is a colloid of two or more immiscible liquids where one liquid contains a dispersion of the other liquids. In other words, an emulsion is a special type of mixture made by combining two liquids that normally don't mix. ... The process of turning a liquid mixture into an emulsion is called emulsification.mmm

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