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Chemistry: Solutions - Lecture 3 Class 12

Chemistry: Solutions - Lecture 3 | CHEMCA
Class 12 / JEE / NEET Chapter 1

Chemistry - Solutions | Lecture 3

By Abhishek Sengar

Lecture Chapters

Click any topic to jump directly to that point in the video.

Theory & Quick Notes

1 Vapor Pressure

Vapor Pressure is defined as the pressure exerted by a vapor in thermodynamic equilibrium with its condensed phases (solid or liquid) at a given temperature in a closed system.

CORE CONCEPT

Equilibrium Condition

Vapor pressure is measured exactly when:
Rate of Evaporation = Rate of Condensation

Note: The vapor pressure of a liquid at its boiling point is exactly equal to the external atmospheric pressure.

Clausius-Clapeyron Equation:

Relates the change in vapor pressure with temperature:

log(P₂ / P₁) = [ΔHvap / 2.303 R] × [(1/T₁) - (1/T₂)]

2 Raoult's Law

Raoult's Law states that for a solution of volatile liquids, the partial vapor pressure of each component of the solution is directly proportional to its mole fraction present in solution.

1. For Volatile Solutes

Both solute and solvent create vapor pressure.

pA = p°A × xA

pB = p°B × xB

Ptotal = pA + pB

2. For Non-Volatile Solutes

Only the solvent (A) evaporates. Solute (B) does not.

B = 0

Psolution = p°A × xA

Crucial Rule:

Upon addition of a non-volatile solute (like NaCl or Glucose) to a volatile solvent (like Water), the vapor pressure of the solution always decreases compared to the pure solvent.

3 Composition in Vapor Phase

Once vapor is formed above the solution, it has its own mole fraction. We use Dalton's Law of partial pressures to find the mole fraction of a component in the vapor phase (denoted as y).

yA = pA / Ptotal

yB = pB / Ptotal

Remember: yA + yB = 1

Deep Dive

Want the Complete Detailed Notes?

Read the full comprehensive article for Chapter 1 on our blog, including detailed theory, solved examples, and deep dives for JEE/NEET.

Read Full Article
Test Your Knowledge

Lecture 3 Checkpoint

Answer these quick questions to solidify your understanding of Raoult's Law.

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JEE & NEET Chemistry by Abhishek Sengar

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1 comment:

  1. Anonymous17:04

    .
    ​This is excellent. Thank you so much

    ReplyDelete

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