How could you use a difference in melting points (freezing points) to separate a solution of two liquids?

1 Answer

Answer :

freeze one liquid while the other one is still liquidized.

Related questions

Description : Which of the following statements is not true about triacylglycerols? (a) When solids and semisolids at room temperature, they are called fats. (b) When liquids at room temperature, they are ... low melting points are composed of saturated fatty acids, causing them to be liquids at room temperature

Last Answer : Triacylglycerols with low melting points are composed of saturated fatty acids, causing them to be liquids at room temperature

Description : If a substance forms crystals when it solidifies its melting and freezing points are the same?

Last Answer : Melting and freezing points are identical.

Description : What is the difference between the melting and freezing point?

Last Answer : Freezing point is the point where a liquid turns into a solid.Melting point is the point where a solid turns into a liquid.

Description : Agar is used for solidifying culture media because A-it does not affect by the growth of bacteria B-it does not add to the nutritive properties of the medium C-the melting and solidifying points of agar solution are not the same D-all of the above

Last Answer : all of the above

Description : Hydrometer measures the specific gravity of liquids based on the principles of buoyancy. Pycnometer is used to measure the specific gravity of (A) Powder & granular solids (B) Liquids (C) Low melting point semi-solids (D) All 'a', 'b' & 'c

Last Answer : (D) All 'a', 'b' & 'c

Description : Which of the following decreases with increase in pressure? (A) Melting point of ice (B) Melting point of wax (C) Boiling point of liquids (D) None of these

Last Answer : (A) Melting point of ice

Description : How is the relationship between freezing and melting similar to the relationship between condensation and evaporation?

Last Answer : do not knowhow 2 do this problemcan u plz help me

Description : Are freezing point and melting point same with respect to change of state ? Comment.

Last Answer : Are freezing point and melting point same with respect to change of state ? Comment.

Description : What is the blank of melting is freezing?

Last Answer : Need answer

Description : The point at which the solid, liquid and gaseous forms of a substance co-exist is called its (a) boiling point (b) melting point (c) triple point (d) freezing point

Last Answer : Ans:(c)

Description : The point at which the solid, liquid and gaseous forms of a substance co-exist is called its (a) Boiling point (b) Melting point (c) Triple point (d) Freezing point

Last Answer : Ans:(c)

Description : Super cooling is cooling of liquid _____. (1) below melting point (2) below freezing point (3) at melting point (4) above melting point

Last Answer : (2) below freezing point Explanation: Supercooling is the process of chilling a liquid below its freezing point, without it becoming solid.

Description : Super cooling stands for cooling of a liquid – (1) at freezing point (2) below freezing point (3) at melting point (4) above melting point

Last Answer : (2) below freezing point Explanation: Supercooling, also known as undercooling, is the process of lowering the temperature of a liquid or a gas below its freezing point without it ... droplets of water below their freezing point. Refrigeration is a popular commercial application of supercooling.

Description : Define the term melting, boiling, evaporation, condensation, freezing.

Last Answer : ∗ Melting:- The temperature at which things melt is called melting. ∗ Boiling:- The temperature at which liquid things boil is called boiling point. ∗ Evaporation:- When water is heated, it changes into ... . ∗ Freezing. When water is cooled, it freezes into form of ice. This is called freezing.

Description : Change of state namely evaporation condensation, freezing and melting is an __________ process. (A) Isothermal (B) Adiabatic (C) Isobaric (D) Isochoric

Last Answer : (A) Isothermal

Description : Solid and liquid phases of a substance are in equilibrium at the (A) Critical temperature (B) Melting point (C) Freezing point (D) Both (B) and (C)

Last Answer : D) Both (B) and (C)

Description : Occurs when the vapor pressure equals the atmospheric pressure  a. Boiling  b. Melting  c. Freezing  d. Vaporizing

Last Answer : Boiling

Description : The phenomenon of melting under pressure and freezing again when the pressure is reduced is known as  a. sublimation  b. condensation  c. deposition  d. regelation

Last Answer : regelation

Description : The specific terms used in phase transitions  a. melting  b. evaporation  c. freezing  d. sublimation

Last Answer : evaporation

Description : Super cooling stands for cooling of a liquid : (1) at freezing point (2) below freezing point (3) at melting point (4) above melting point

Last Answer :  below freezing point

Description : A fractionating column is a glass apparatus used to (a) Separate magnetic solids from nonmagnetic solids (b) Separate a mixture in water (c) Separate two or more liquids (d) Extract oils from vegetable matter

Last Answer : Ans:(c)

Description : How will you separate two immiscible liquids in pharmacy? Draw a libelled sketch of the apparatus used in laboratory. 

Last Answer : :Steam Distillation( immiscible liquids): In pair of immiscible liquids , each liquid exerts its own vapour pressure & neither liquid has any appreciable effect on the vapour pressure ... are not decomposed by water , this provides an alternative to distillation under reduced pressure  

Description : How did you separate the solids from the liquids?

Last Answer : Solids can often be removed from a liquid by filtering theliquid, or by settling, where solids either settle to the bottom orfloat to the top.

Description : Distillation can be used to separate solutions of miscible liquids because ?

Last Answer : Distillation works because liquids boil at different temperatures. Roughly speaking, in order to separate two liquids, you should heat the mixture to a temperature where one of the liquids (but not the ... boil off, leaving the second liquid behind; you can collect the first liquid in a condenser.

Description : Melting point & boiling points of liquid oxygen are respectively - 218.8°C & - 183°C, while the same for liquid nitrogen is - 210°C & - 195.8°C respectively. The difference in melting points of liquid oxygen & liquid nitrogen is not equal to 8.8 (A) °C (B) °F (C) °K (D) °R

Last Answer : (B) °F

Description : Distillation at reduced pressure is used for liquids which (a) Have high boiling points (b) Have low boiling points (c) Have high volatility (d) Decompose before their boiling points

Last Answer : Ans:(d)

Description : Inside the distillation column, the (A) Driving force for the vapour flow is the pressure drop (B) Liquids are not always at their bubble points (C) Pressure increases gradually from bottom to the top of the column (D) None of these

Last Answer : (A) Driving force for the vapour flow is the pressure drop

Description : What type of solution is formed when two liquids do not mix?

Last Answer : Two substances that can never mix together are called immiscible. So oil and water is immiscible and can not form a solution. Sugar and water can form a solution, as the sugar can dissolve entirely into the water - and is therefore, miscible.

Description : A colloidal solution formed between two liquids is called?

Last Answer : Emulsion

Description : Leidenfrost point is a term concerned with the (A) Condensation of the saturated vapor on a cold surface (B) Concentration of a corrosive solution by evaporation (C) Heat transfer between two highly viscous liquids (D) Boiling of a liquid on a hot surface

Last Answer : (D) Boiling of a liquid on a hot surface

Description : Critical solution temperature (or the con-solute temperature) for partially miscible liquids (e.g., phenol-water) is the minimum temperature at which (A) A homogeneous solution (say of phenol water) is ... a decreasing trend (C) Two liquids are completely separated into two layers (D) None of these

Last Answer : (A) A homogeneous solution (say of phenol water) is formed

Description : If an ideal solution is formed by mixing two pure liquids in any proportion, then the __________ of mixing is zero (A) Enthalpy (B) Volume (C) Both 'a' & 'b' (D) Neither 'a' nor 'b'

Last Answer : (C) Both 'a' & 'b'

Description : A solution is (1) a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances (2) a solid dissolved in a liquid (3) a solid dissolved i water (4) a mixture of two liquids 

Last Answer : a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances

Description : What is a solution A. a solid dissolved in a gas B. a solute and a solvent C. a liquid dissolved in a gas D. an amalgam of solids, liquids, and gases?

Last Answer : B. A solute and a solvent

Description : For a solution of volatile liquids, the partial vapour pressure of each component in solution is directly proportional to its (a) Molarity (b) Mole fraction (c) Molality (d) Normality

Last Answer : Ans:(b)

Description : What is the molar mass of haemocyanin and the freezing point of the solution when an aqueous solution is prepared by dissolving 1.5 grams of haemocyanin a protein obtained from crabs in 0.25 litres of?

Last Answer : Haemocyanins are a group of proteins.

Description : On addition of solute in the solvent, the __________ of the solution decreases. (A) Boiling point (B) Freezing point (C) Vapour pressure (D) Both (B) and (C)

Last Answer : (D) Both (B) and (C)

Description : Which of the following properties is greater for a solution than for the pure solvent? w) freezing point x) vapor pressure y) temperature z) boiling point

Last Answer : ANSWER: D -- BOILING POINT

Description : In Celsius, the freezing point of a one-molal water solution of sodium phosphate, chemical formula Na3PO4, is expected to be: w) - 0.93 degrees Celsius x) - 1.86 degrees Celsius y) - 7.44 degrees Celsius z) - 3.72 degrees Celsius

Last Answer : ANSWER: C -- (- 7.44 DEGREES CELSIUS)

Description : What are melting points and boiling points ? What is melting point and boiling point ?

Last Answer : Melting point refers to the process of melting a solid into a liquid at a certain temperature. Boiling point is the temperature at which a liquid evaporates. Therefore , the temperature at which a liquid begins to evaporate is called the 'boiling point' of that substance.

Description : The points noted by arrows are melting and boiling points of the metal zinc and magnasium. `Delta G^(0)` as a function of temperature for some reactio

Last Answer : The points noted by arrows are melting and boiling points of the metal zinc and magnasium. `Delta G^(0)` ... +Zn rarr Mg+ZnO` D. `ZnO+Mg rarrZn+MgO`

Description : The points noted by arrows are melting and boiling points of the metal zinc and magnasium. `Delta G^(0)` as a function of temperature for some reactio

Last Answer : The points noted by arrows are melting and boiling points of the metal zinc and magnasium. `Delta G^(0)` as a ... gt 500^(@)C " but " lt 1000^(@)C`

Description : The points noted by arrows are melting and boiling points of the metal zinc and magnasium. `Delta G^(0)` as a function of temperature for some reactio

Last Answer : The points noted by arrows are melting and boiling points of the metal zinc and magnasium. `Delta G^(0)` as a ... C. `500^(@)C` D. `1200^(@)C`

Description : What kind of solid tends to have the solid lowest melting points?

Last Answer : Solids made up of molecules

Description : Can ionic substances have high or low melting points?

Last Answer : Generally ionic substances have high melting and boiling points.

Description : How compared with the melting points of ionic compounds the melting points of molecular solids tend to be?

Last Answer : Ionic compounds have a higher melting point.

Description : Why do covalent compounds have low melting points?

Last Answer : Because although the covalent bonds between the elements are strong, there are only weak forces between the molecules so they have low melting points

Description : Why do covalent compounds have low melting points?

Last Answer : Because although the covalent bonds between the elements are strong, there are only weak forces between the molecules so they have low melting points

Description : Most covalent compounds (a) Behave like electrolytes in the molten state (b) Have high melting and boiling points (c) Are hard substances because of strong covalent bonds (d) Are more soluble in non-polar solvents than in polar solvents

Last Answer : Ans:(d)