Difference between revisions of "Partition equilibrium"
m (Date maintenance tags and general fixes using AWB) |
m (1 revision) |
(No difference)
|
Latest revision as of 19:16, 21 September 2010
This article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject. Please help improve the article with a good introductory style. (September 2008) |
This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2008) |
The most common chemical equilibrium systems involve reactants and products in the same phase - either all gases or all solutions. However, it is also possible to get equilibria between substances in different phases, such as two liquids that do not mix (are immiscible).
Contents
Example
For example, ammonia (NH3) is soluble in both water (aq) and the organic solvent trichloromethane (CHCl3) - two immiscible solvents. If ammonia is first dissolved in water, and then an equal volume of trichloromethane is added, and the two liquids shaken together, the following equilibrium is established:
- Kc = [NH3 (CHCl3)]/[NH3 (aq)] (where Kc is the equilibrium constant)
The equilibrium concentrations of ammonia in each layer can be established by titration with standard acid solution. It can thus be determined that Kc remains constant, with a value of 0.4 in this case.
Partition coefficient
This particular kind of equilibrium constant measures how a substance distributes or partitions itself between two immiscible solvents. It is called the partition coefficient or distribution coefficient.
Polar and non-polar substances
Substances that are ionic or polar are more soluble in water than in non-polar organic solvents and vice-versa.
Partition equilibrium chromatography
Partition equilibrium chromatography is a type of chromatography that is typically used in gas chromatography (GC) and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The stationary phase in GC is a high boiling liquid bonded to solid surface and the mobile phase is a gas.
See also
32px | This chemistry-related article is a stub. You can help ssf by expanding it. |
- Wikipedia articles needing context from September 2008
- Articles with invalid date parameter in template
- All Wikipedia articles needing context
- Wikipedia introduction cleanup from September 2008
- All pages needing cleanup
- Articles lacking sources from March 2008
- All articles lacking sources
- Equilibrium chemistry
- Chromatography
- Gas chromatography
- Pages with broken file links
- Chemistry stubs
- 2Fix