Chemistry, asked by shruti5370, 11 months ago

what is azeotrops with example explain ​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

An azeotrope or a constant boiling point mixture is a mixture of two or more liquids whose proportions cannot be altered or changed by simple distillation. This happens because when an azeotrope is boiled, the vapour has the same proportions of constituents as the unboiled mixture.

Explanation:

The most common example is the azeotrope between water and ethanol (grain alcohol). Water boils at 100 ºC and ethanol boils at 78.3 ºC. The mixture will boil at 78.2 ºC and have a composition of 95% ethanol and 5% water by volume. This is a binary azeotrope because it involves two components.

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Answered by silentlover45
1

\huge\red{\boxed{\bold{Answer}}}

\large\underline\mathrm\pink{Azeotropic Mixture:-}

An Azeotropic Mixture is a mixture of two real, miscible liquid which boil and distil at a constant temperature without undergoing any charges in composition.

\large\underline\mathrm\pink{In \: case \: of \: type \: 1 \: solutions, :-}

minimum - boiling point azeotropic is formed while.

\large\underline\mathrm\pink{In \: case \: of \: type \: 2 \: solutions,:-}

maximum boiling point azeotropic is formed. An Azeotropic Mixture cannot be separated into pure components by fraction distillation. A liquid mixture which distils with a changein composition is called a zeotropic mixture.

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