Physics, asked by Kannan0017, 10 months ago

what is Raoult's law​

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Answered by Anonymous
2

Hello Mate,

Raoult's law states that a solvent's partial vapour pressure in a solution (or mixture) is equal or identical to the vapour pressure of the pure solvent multiplied by its mole fraction in the solution. ... Because A and B are both volatile, there would be both particles of A and B in the vapour phase...

Hope this helps you

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Raoult's law states that the vapor pressure of a solution is equal to the sum of the vapor pressures of each volatile component if it were pure multiplied by the mole fraction of that component in the solution. The effect of Raoult's Law is that the saturated vapor pressure of a solution is going to be lower than that of the pure solvent at any particular temperature. That has important effects on the phase diagram of the solvent.

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