Mixture: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Substance formed when two or more constituents are physically combined}} |
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{{otheruses}} |
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{{Other uses|Mixture (disambiguation)}} |
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[[Image:WaterAndFlourSuspensionLiquid.jpg|thumb|A [[suspension (chemistry)|suspension]] of flour in water, a heterogeneous mixture]] |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2021}} |
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In [[chemistry]], a '''mixture''' is a [[material]] made up of two or more different chemical substances which can be separated by physical method. It's an impure substance made up of 2 or more elements or compounds mechanically mixed together in any proportion.<ref>{{GoldBookRef|title=mixture |file=M03949 }}</ref> A mixture is the physical combination of two or more substances in which the identities are retained and are mixed in the form of [[Solution (chemistry)|solution]]s, [[Suspension (chemistry)|suspensions]] or [[colloid]]s.<ref>{{cite book|author=Whitten K.W., Gailey K. D. and Davis R. E.|year= 1992|title= General chemistry |edition=4th |publisher= Saunders College Publishing|location= Philadelphia|isbn= 978-0-03-072373-5}}{{page needed|date=October 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1 = Petrucci |first1 = Ralph H. |last2 = Harwood |first2 = William S. |last3 = Herring |first3 = F. Geography |date=2002 |title = General chemistry: principles and modern applications |url = https://archive.org/details/generalchemistry00hill |url-access = registration |edition=8th |location=Upper Saddle River, N.J |publisher=Prentice Hall |isbn = 978-0-13-014329-7 |lccn=2001032331 |oclc=46872308 }}{{page needed|date=October 2021}}</ref> |
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Mixtures are one product of mechanically blending or mixing chemical substances such as [[chemical element|elements]] and [[Compound (chemistry)|compounds]], without chemical bonding or other chemical change, so that each ingredient substance retains its own chemical properties and makeup.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Atkins' Physical Chemistry|last1=De Paula|first1=Julio|last2=Atkins|first2=P. W.|year=2002|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-879285-7|edition=7th}}{{page needed|date=October 2021}}</ref> Despite the fact that there are no chemical changes to its constituents, the physical properties of a mixture, such as its [[melting point]], may differ from those of the components. Some mixtures can be [[separation process|separated]] into their components by using physical (mechanical or thermal) means. [[Azeotrope]]s are one kind of mixture that usually poses considerable difficulties regarding the separation processes required to obtain their constituents (physical or chemical processes or, even a blend of them).<ref name="Alberts">{{cite book|author=Alberts B.|display-authors=etal|year=2002|title= Molecular Biology of the Cell, 4th Ed.|publisher= Garland Science|isbn=978-0-8153-4072-0}}{{page needed|date=October 2021}}</ref><ref name="Laider">{{cite book|author=Laidler K. J.|year=1978|title=Physical chemistry with biological applications |publisher=Benjamin/Cummings|location= Menlo Park|isbn=978-0-8053-5680-9}}{{page needed|date=October 2021}}</ref><ref name="Weast">{{cite book|author=Weast R. C., Ed.|year= 1990|title=CRC Handbook of chemistry and physics|publisher= Chemical Rubber Publishing Company|location= Boca Raton|isbn=978-0-8493-0470-5}}{{page needed|date=October 2021}}</ref> |
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In [[chemistry]], a '''mixture''' is a substance made by combining two or more different materials without a chemical reaction occurring. A mixture is very different from a compound. The objects do not bond together in a mixture. A mixture can usually be separated back into its original components. Some examples of mixtures are: fruit salad,ocean water and soil, some examples of heterogeneous mixtures are sandy water, iron fillings, sulfur and salt mixed with sand. Mixtures are the product of a [[mechanical blending]] or mixing of [[chemical substance]]s like [[chemical element|elements]] and [[chemical compound|compounds]], without chemical bonding or other chemical change, so that each ingredient substance retains its own chemical properties and makeup.<ref>Atkins' Physical Chemistry, 7th Ed. by Julio De Paula, P.W. Atkins ISBN 0198792859</ref> |
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==Characteristics of mixtures== |
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While there are no chemical changes in a mixture, physical properties of a mixture, such as its [[melting point]], may differ from those of its components. Mixtures can usually be [[separation process|separated]] by any mechanical means. |
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All mixtures can be characterized as being separable by mechanical means (e.g. [[wikt:purification|purification]], [[distillation]], [[electrolysis]], [[chromatography]], [[heat]], [[filtration]], [[gravitation]]al sorting, [[centrifugation]]).<ref>{{cite book |doi=10.5744/florida/9780813054254.003.0003 |title=Home Front |year=2017 |isbn=978-0-8130-5425-4 |editor1-last=Pleasants |editor1-first=Julian M |chapter=A Call to Duty: The Selective Service Act of 1940 }}</ref><ref name=mixture>{{Cite encyclopedia| title =Mixture| encyclopedia =The Encyclopedia of Environmental Studies| publisher =Facts on File | year =2001| editor-first=William |editor-last=Ashworth |editor2-first=Charles E. |editor2-last=Little}}</ref> Mixtures differ from chemical compounds in the following ways: |
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Mixtures are either homogeneous or heterogeneous. |
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* The substances in a mixture can be separated using physical methods such as filtration, freezing, and distillation. |
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* There is little or no energy change when a mixture forms (see [[Enthalpy of mixing]]). |
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*The substances in a mixture keep their separate properties. |
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In the example of sand and water, neither one of the two substances changed in any way when they are mixed. Although the sand is in the water it still keeps the same properties that it had when it was outside the water. |
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* mixtures have variable compositions, while compounds have a fixed, definite formula. |
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* when mixed, individual substances keep their properties in a mixture, while if they form a compound their properties can change.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.chemicool.com/definition/mixture.html|title=Definition of mixture - Chemistry Dictionary|website=www.chemicool.com|access-date=2018-11-30}}</ref> |
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The following table shows the main properties and examples for all possible phase combinations of the three "families" of mixtures : |
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=='''Homogeneous mixtures'''== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|+Mixtures Table |
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|- |
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! Dispersion medium (mixture phase) || Dissolved or dispersed phase || Solution || Colloid || Suspension (coarse dispersion) |
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|- |
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! rowspan="3" | [[Gas]] |
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| Gas || Gas mixture: [[air]] ([[oxygen]] and other gases in [[nitrogen]]) || {{CNone|None}} || {{CNone|None}} |
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|- |
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| Liquid || {{CNone|None}} || Liquid [[aerosol]]:<ref name="PDF1">{{Cite report|url=https://www.iupac.org/publications/pac/pdf/1972/pdf/3104x0577👺.pdf|title=Manual of Symbols and Terminology for Physicochemical Quantities and Units. Appendix II Definitions, Terminology and Symbols in Colloid and Surface Chemistry. Part I|last=Everett|first=D. H.|date=23 July 1971|publisher=International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry: Division of Physical Chemistry|location=London|access-date=28 October 2016|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161028084759/https://www.iupac.org/publications/pac/pdf/1972/pdf/3104x0577.pdf|archive-date=28 October 2016}}</ref><br /> [[fog]], [[mist]], [[vapor]], [[hair spray]]s || Spray |
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|- |
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| Solid || {{CNone|None}} || Solid aerosol:<ref name="PDF1"/><br /> [[smoke]], [[ice cloud]], air [[particulate]]s || [[Dust]] |
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|- |
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! rowspan="3" | [[Liquid]] |
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| Gas || [[Solution (chemistry)|Solution]]:<br /> oxygen in [[water]] || Liquid [[foam]]:<br /> [[whipped cream]], [[shaving cream]] || [[Sea foam]], [[beer head]] |
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|- |
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| Liquid || Solution:<br /> [[alcoholic beverage]]s || [[Emulsion]]:<br /> [[milk]], [[mayonnaise]], [[hand cream]] || [[Vinaigrette]] |
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|- |
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| Solid || Solution:<br /> [[sugar]] in water || Liquid [[Sol (colloid)|sol]]:<br /> [[pigment]]ed [[ink]], [[blood]] || [[Suspension (chemistry)|Suspension]]:<br /> [[mud]] ([[soil]] particles suspended in water), [[chalk]] powder suspended in water |
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|- |
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! rowspan="3" | [[Solid]] |
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| Gas || Solution:<br /> [[hydrogen]] in [[metal]]s || Solid foam:<br /> [[aerogel]], [[styrofoam]], [[pumice]] || Foam:<br /> dry [[sponge]] |
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|- |
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| Liquid || Solution:<br /> [[amalgam (chemistry)|amalgam]] ([[mercury (element)|mercury]] in [[gold]]), [[hexane]] in [[paraffin wax]] || [[Gel]]:<br /> [[agar]], [[gelatin]], [[silicagel]], [[opal]] || Wet sponge |
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|- |
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| Solid || Solution:<br /> [[alloy]]s, [[plasticizer]]s in [[plastic]]s || Solid sol:<br /> [[cranberry glass]] || [[Clay]], [[silt]], [[sand]], [[gravel]], [[granite]] |
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==='''Solutions'''=== |
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|} |
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==Homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures== |
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[[File:Mixtures and Pure Substances 2x2.svg|thumb|A diagram representing at the microscopic level the differences between homogeneous mixtures, heterogeneous mixtures, compounds, and elements.]] |
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A solution is when a [[wiktionary:Homogeneous|homogeneous]] mixture of one or more substances (the [[Solution|solute]]s) [[Solvation|dissolved]] in another substance (the [[solvent]]). Solutions have all particles within the size of atoms, small molecules or small ions, less than 1 nanometer (nm) in all dimensions.<ref name="cmaic"> Chemistry: Matter and Its Changes, 4th Ed. by Brady, Senese, ISBN 0471215171</ref> A common example would be a [[solid]] dissolving into a [[liquid]] (i.e. [[salt]] or [[sugar]] dissolving in water or [[gold]] into [[Mercury (element)|mercury]]). Liquids dissolve into one another, and sometimes liquids dissolve into gases, for example [[water vapor]] and the [[atmosphere]]. Common examples include fountain drinks, where [[carbon dioxide]] is trapped in the liquid through [[carbonation]]. Several solution properties collectively called [[colligative properties]] change as a function of solute concentration. [[Solubility]] is a compound property. |
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Mixtures can be either ''homogeneous'' or ''heterogeneous'': a mixture of uniform composition and in which all components are in the same phase, such as salt in water, is called homogeneous, whereas a mixture of non-uniform composition and of which the components can be easily identified, such as sand in water, it is called heterogeneous. |
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In addition, "'''uniform mixture'''" is another term for '''homogeneous mixture''' and "'''non-uniform mixture'''" is another term for '''heterogeneous mixture'''. These terms are derived from the idea that a '''homogeneous mixture''' has a '''uniform appearance''', or '''only one phase''', because the particles are evenly distributed. However, a '''heterogeneous mixture''' has constituent substances that are in different phases and '''easily distinguishable''' from one another. In addition, a heterogeneous mixture may have a uniform (e.g. a colloid) or non-uniform (e.g. a pencil) composition. |
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=='''Heterogeneous mixtures'''== |
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{{main|Heterogeneous}} |
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Heterogeneous mixtures are mixtures with inconsistent, non-uniform composition. The parts of a heterogeneous composition can be mechanically separated from each other. Examples include salad, [[trail mix]] and granite. |
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Several solid substances, such as [[salt]] and [[sugar]], dissolve in water to form homogeneous mixtures or "[[Solution (chemistry)|solutions]]", in which there are both a [[solute]] (dissolved substance) and a [[solvent]] (dissolving medium) present. [[Air]] is an example of a solution as well: a homogeneous mixture of gaseous nitrogen solvent, in which oxygen and smaller amounts of other gaseous solutes are dissolved. Mixtures are not limited in either their number of substances or the amounts of those substances, though in most solutions, the solute-to-solvent proportion can only reach [[Solubility|a certain point]] before the mixture separates and becomes heterogeneous. |
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==='''Suspensions'''=== |
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{{main|Suspension (chemistry)}} |
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A heterogeneous mixture in which the particles, of at least one component is larger than 1μm (1000nm) in at least one dimension, larger than colloidal particles.<ref name="cmaic" /> Unlike colloids, suspensions will eventually settle. An example of a suspension would be sand in water another example would be clothing made up of 2 or more materials such as cotton and polyester. Particles of suspensions exhibit the [[Tyndall effect]], that is, they are big enough to disperse light. |
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A homogeneous mixture is characterized by uniform dispersion of its constituent substances throughout; the substances exist in equal proportion everywhere within the mixture. Differently put, a homogeneous mixture will be the same no matter from where in the mixture it is sampled. For example, if a solid-liquid solution is divided into two halves of equal [[volume]], the halves will contain equal [[Amount of substance|amounts]] of both the liquid medium and dissolved solid (solvent and solute) |
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==='''Colloidal dispersions'''=== |
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{{main|Colloid}} |
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Colloids are Heterogeneous Mixtures in which the particles of one or more components have at least one dimension in the range of 1 to 1000nm, larger than those in a solution but smaller than those in a suspension.<ref name="cmaic" /> In general, a colloid or colloidal dispersion is a substance with components of one or two phases. It creates the [[Tyndall effect]] when light passes through it. A colloid will not settle. Jelly, milk, blood, paint, fog, and glue are examples of colloid dispersions. |
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===Homogeneous mixtures=== |
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=='''Mixtures and compounds'''== |
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A [[compound (chemistry)|compound]] is not a mixture. A compound has very different properties than the elements it is made of, but a mixture contains several substances which keep their properties. |
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== |
====Solutions==== |
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{{Main articles|Solution (chemistry)}} |
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* [[Concrete#Chemical_admixtures]] |
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A [[Solution (chemistry)|solution]] is equivalent to a "homogeneous mixture". In solutions, solutes will not settle out after any period of time and they cannot be removed by physical methods, such as a filter or [[centrifuge]].<ref name=solution>{{Cite encyclopedia | title =Solution (chemistry)| encyclopedia =Encyclopedia of Studies, New Edition| publisher = Online publisher: Science Online. Facts on File, Inc. | year =2001| last1 =Ashworth | first1 =William | last2 =Little | first2 =Charles E. <!--| access-date =2010–01-01-->}}</ref> As a homogeneous mixture, a solution has one phase (solid, liquid, or gas), although the phase of the solute and solvent may initially have been different (e.g., salt water). |
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* [[Colligative properties]] |
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* [[Molar solution]] |
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* [[Percentage solution]] |
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* [[Plasticizer]] |
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* [[Separation process]] |
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* [[Solubility equilibrium]] |
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* [[Plasticizer|Superplasticizer]] |
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* [[Suspension (chemistry)]] |
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* [[Water reducer]] |
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== |
====Gases==== |
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Gases exhibit by far the greatest space (and, consequently, the weakest intermolecular forces) between their atoms or molecules; since intermolecular interactions are minuscule in comparison to those in liquids and solids, dilute gases very easily form solutions with one another. Air is one such example: it can be more specifically described as a gaseous solution of oxygen and other gases dissolved in nitrogen (its major component). |
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<references /> |
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====General Properties of a Homogeneous Mixture==== |
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=='''External links'''== |
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* [http://goldbook.iupac.org/M03949.html IUPAC Gold Book Definition] |
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The basic properties of solutions are as drafted under:{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}} |
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[[Category:Chemical mixtures| ]] |
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* All solutions are the examples of homogeneous mixture. |
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[[ur:آمیزہ]] |
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* The particles of a homogeneous mixture are less than one nanometre in size. |
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[[ar:مزيج]] |
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* A homogeneous mixture does not show Tyndall effect. |
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[[gn:Jehe'a]] |
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* The constituent of homogeneous mixture cannot be separated using centrifugation or decantation. |
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[[ca:Mescla]] |
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[[cs:Směs]] |
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===Heterogeneous mixtures=== |
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[[de:Gemisch]] |
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Examples of heterogeneous mixtures are [[emulsion]]s and [[foam]]s. In most cases, the mixture consists of two main constituents. For an emulsion, these are [[immiscible]] fluids such as water and oil. For a foam, these are a solid and a fluid, or a liquid and a gas. On larger scales both constituents are present in any region of the mixture, and in a well-mixed mixture in the same or only slightly varying concentrations. On a microscopic scale, however, one of the constituents is absent in almost any sufficiently small region. (If such absence is common on macroscopic scales, the combination of the constituents is a [[dispersed medium]], not a mixture.) One can distinguish different characteristics of heterogeneous mixtures by the presence or absence of [[Continuum percolation theory|continuum percolation]] of their constituents. For a foam, a distinction is made between [[reticulated foam]] in which one constituent forms a connected network through which the other can freely percolate, or a closed-cell foam in which one constituent is present as trapped in small cells whose walls are formed by the other constituents. A similar distinction is possible for emulsions. In many emulsions, one constituent is present in the form of isolated regions of typically a globular shape, dispersed throughout the other constituent. However, it is also possible each constituent forms a large, connected network. Such a mixture is then called '''bicontinuous'''.<ref>{{cite book |title=Heterogeneous Materials I: Linear Transport and Optical Properties |last=Sahimi |first=Muhammad |date=26 May 2006 |page=31 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-0-387-21705-5}}</ref> |
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[[el:Μίγμα]] |
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[[es:Mezcla]] |
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==Distinguishing between mixture types== |
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[[eo:Miksaĵo]] |
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Making a distinction between homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures is a matter of the scale of sampling. On a coarse enough scale, any mixture can be said to be homogeneous, if the entire article is allowed to count as a "sample" of it. On a fine enough scale, any mixture can be said to be heterogeneous, because a sample could be as small as a single molecule. In practical terms, if the property of interest of the mixture is the same regardless of which sample of it is taken for the examination used, the mixture is homogeneous. |
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[[fr:Mélange]] |
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[[gl:Mestura]] |
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[[Gy's sampling theory]] quantitatively defines the '''heterogeneity''' of a particle as:<ref>{{Cite book|title=Sampling of Particulate Materials: Theory and Practice|last=Gy|first=P|publisher=Elsevier|year=1979|location=Amsterdam}}</ref> |
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[[ko:혼합물]] |
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[[io:Mixuro]] |
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:<math>h_i = \frac{(c_i - c_\text{batch})m_i}{c_\text{batch} m_\text{aver}},</math> |
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[[it:Miscuglio]] |
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[[he:תערובת]] |
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where <math>h_i</math>, <math>c_i</math>, <math>c_\text{batch}</math>, <math>m_i</math>, and <math>m_\text{aver}</math> are respectively: the heterogeneity of the <math>i</math>th particle of the population, the mass concentration of the property of interest in the <math>i</math>th particle of the population, the mass concentration of the property of interest in the population, the mass of the <math>i</math>th particle in the population, and the average mass of a particle in the population. |
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[[mk:Смеса]] |
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[[nl:Mengsel]] |
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During [[Sampling (statistics)|sampling]] of heterogeneous mixtures of particles, the variance of the [[sampling error]] is generally non-zero. |
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[[ja:混合物]] |
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[[pl:Mieszanina]] |
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Pierre Gy derived, from the Poisson sampling model, the following formula for the variance of the sampling error in the mass concentration in a sample: |
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[[pt:Mistura]] |
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[[ru:Смесь]] |
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:<math>V = \frac{1}{(\sum_{i=1}^N q_i m_i)^2} \sum_{i=1}^N q_i(1-q_i) m_{i}^{2} \left(a_i - \frac{\sum_{j=1}^N q_j a_j m_j}{\sum_{j=1}^N q_j m_j}\right)^2,</math> |
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[[simple:Mixture]] |
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[[sk:Zmes]] |
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in which ''V'' is the variance of the sampling error, ''N'' is the number of particles in the population (before the sample was taken), ''q''<sub> ''i''</sub> is the probability of including the ''i''th particle of the population in the sample (i.e. the [[first-order inclusion probability]] of the ''i''th particle), ''m''<sub> ''i''</sub> is the mass of the ''i''th particle of the population and ''a''<sub> ''i''</sub> is the mass concentration of the property of interest in the ''i''th particle of the population. |
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[[fi:Seos]] |
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[[sv:Blandning]] |
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The above equation for the variance of the sampling error is an approximation based on a [[linearization]] of the mass concentration in a sample. |
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[[tr:Kimyasal karışım]] |
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[[zh:混合物]] |
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In the theory of Gy, [[correct sampling]] is defined as a sampling scenario in which all particles have the same probability of being included in the sample. This implies that ''q''<sub> ''i''</sub> no longer depends on ''i'', and can therefore be replaced by the symbol ''q''. Gy's equation for the variance of the sampling error becomes: |
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:<math>V = \frac{1-q}{q M_\text{batch}^2} \sum_{i=1}^N m_{i}^{2} \left(a_i - a_\text{batch} \right)^2,</math> |
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where ''a''<sub>batch</sub> is that concentration of the property of interest in the population from which the sample is to be drawn and ''M''<sub>batch</sub> is the mass of the population from which the sample is to be drawn. |
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== Health effects == |
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[[Air pollution]] research<ref>{{Cite web |last=US EPA |first=ORD |title=Exposure and Health Effects of Mixtures of Air Pollutants |url=https://19january2017snapshot.epa.gov/air-research/exposure-and-health-effects-mixtures-air-pollutants |access-date=2022-11-10 |website=19january2017snapshot.epa.gov |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Institute |first=Health Effects |date=2016-03-09 |title=Multipollutant Mixtures |url=https://www.healtheffects.org/air-pollution/multipollutant-mixtures |access-date=2022-11-10 |website=Health Effects Institute |language=en}}</ref> show biological and health effects after exposure to mixtures are more potent than effects from exposures of individual components.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Majumder |first1=Nairrita |last2=Kodali |first2=Vamsi |last3=Velayutham |first3=Murugesan |last4=Goldsmith |first4=Travis |last5=Amedro |first5=Jessica |last6=Khramtsov |first6=Valery V |last7=Erdely |first7=Aaron |last8=Nurkiewicz |first8=Timothy R |last9=Harkema |first9=Jack R |last10=Kelley |first10=Eric E |last11=Hussain |first11=Salik |date=2022-10-27 |title=Aerosol physicochemical determinants of carbon black and ozone inhalation co-exposure induced pulmonary toxicity |journal=Toxicological Sciences |volume=191 |issue=1 |pages=61–78 |doi=10.1093/toxsci/kfac113 |pmid=36303316 |pmc=9887725 |issn=1096-6080 }}</ref> |
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==Homogenization== |
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{{Main|Homogenization (chemistry)|Mixing (process engineering)}} |
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==Properties of a mixture == |
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* [[Chemical substance]] |
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* [[Mixing (process engineering)]] |
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== References == |
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{{Reflist}} |
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* {{GoldBookRef|title=mixture|file=M03949}} |
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{{Chemical solutions}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:Chemical mixtures| ]] |
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[[Category:Physical chemistry]] |
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[[Category:Chemistry]] |
Latest revision as of 14:43, 1 December 2024
In chemistry, a mixture is a material made up of two or more different chemical substances which can be separated by physical method. It's an impure substance made up of 2 or more elements or compounds mechanically mixed together in any proportion.[1] A mixture is the physical combination of two or more substances in which the identities are retained and are mixed in the form of solutions, suspensions or colloids.[2][3]
Mixtures are one product of mechanically blending or mixing chemical substances such as elements and compounds, without chemical bonding or other chemical change, so that each ingredient substance retains its own chemical properties and makeup.[4] Despite the fact that there are no chemical changes to its constituents, the physical properties of a mixture, such as its melting point, may differ from those of the components. Some mixtures can be separated into their components by using physical (mechanical or thermal) means. Azeotropes are one kind of mixture that usually poses considerable difficulties regarding the separation processes required to obtain their constituents (physical or chemical processes or, even a blend of them).[5][6][7]
Characteristics of mixtures
[edit]All mixtures can be characterized as being separable by mechanical means (e.g. purification, distillation, electrolysis, chromatography, heat, filtration, gravitational sorting, centrifugation).[8][9] Mixtures differ from chemical compounds in the following ways:
- The substances in a mixture can be separated using physical methods such as filtration, freezing, and distillation.
- There is little or no energy change when a mixture forms (see Enthalpy of mixing).
- The substances in a mixture keep their separate properties.
In the example of sand and water, neither one of the two substances changed in any way when they are mixed. Although the sand is in the water it still keeps the same properties that it had when it was outside the water.
- mixtures have variable compositions, while compounds have a fixed, definite formula.
- when mixed, individual substances keep their properties in a mixture, while if they form a compound their properties can change.[10]
The following table shows the main properties and examples for all possible phase combinations of the three "families" of mixtures :
Dispersion medium (mixture phase) | Dissolved or dispersed phase | Solution | Colloid | Suspension (coarse dispersion) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gas | Gas | Gas mixture: air (oxygen and other gases in nitrogen) | None | None |
Liquid | None | Liquid aerosol:[11] fog, mist, vapor, hair sprays |
Spray | |
Solid | None | Solid aerosol:[11] smoke, ice cloud, air particulates |
Dust | |
Liquid | Gas | Solution: oxygen in water |
Liquid foam: whipped cream, shaving cream |
Sea foam, beer head |
Liquid | Solution: alcoholic beverages |
Emulsion: milk, mayonnaise, hand cream |
Vinaigrette | |
Solid | Solution: sugar in water |
Liquid sol: pigmented ink, blood |
Suspension: mud (soil particles suspended in water), chalk powder suspended in water | |
Solid | Gas | Solution: hydrogen in metals |
Solid foam: aerogel, styrofoam, pumice |
Foam: dry sponge |
Liquid | Solution: amalgam (mercury in gold), hexane in paraffin wax |
Gel: agar, gelatin, silicagel, opal |
Wet sponge | |
Solid | Solution: alloys, plasticizers in plastics |
Solid sol: cranberry glass |
Clay, silt, sand, gravel, granite |
Homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures
[edit]Mixtures can be either homogeneous or heterogeneous: a mixture of uniform composition and in which all components are in the same phase, such as salt in water, is called homogeneous, whereas a mixture of non-uniform composition and of which the components can be easily identified, such as sand in water, it is called heterogeneous.
In addition, "uniform mixture" is another term for homogeneous mixture and "non-uniform mixture" is another term for heterogeneous mixture. These terms are derived from the idea that a homogeneous mixture has a uniform appearance, or only one phase, because the particles are evenly distributed. However, a heterogeneous mixture has constituent substances that are in different phases and easily distinguishable from one another. In addition, a heterogeneous mixture may have a uniform (e.g. a colloid) or non-uniform (e.g. a pencil) composition.
Several solid substances, such as salt and sugar, dissolve in water to form homogeneous mixtures or "solutions", in which there are both a solute (dissolved substance) and a solvent (dissolving medium) present. Air is an example of a solution as well: a homogeneous mixture of gaseous nitrogen solvent, in which oxygen and smaller amounts of other gaseous solutes are dissolved. Mixtures are not limited in either their number of substances or the amounts of those substances, though in most solutions, the solute-to-solvent proportion can only reach a certain point before the mixture separates and becomes heterogeneous.
A homogeneous mixture is characterized by uniform dispersion of its constituent substances throughout; the substances exist in equal proportion everywhere within the mixture. Differently put, a homogeneous mixture will be the same no matter from where in the mixture it is sampled. For example, if a solid-liquid solution is divided into two halves of equal volume, the halves will contain equal amounts of both the liquid medium and dissolved solid (solvent and solute)
Homogeneous mixtures
[edit]Solutions
[edit]A solution is equivalent to a "homogeneous mixture". In solutions, solutes will not settle out after any period of time and they cannot be removed by physical methods, such as a filter or centrifuge.[12] As a homogeneous mixture, a solution has one phase (solid, liquid, or gas), although the phase of the solute and solvent may initially have been different (e.g., salt water).
Gases
[edit]Gases exhibit by far the greatest space (and, consequently, the weakest intermolecular forces) between their atoms or molecules; since intermolecular interactions are minuscule in comparison to those in liquids and solids, dilute gases very easily form solutions with one another. Air is one such example: it can be more specifically described as a gaseous solution of oxygen and other gases dissolved in nitrogen (its major component).
General Properties of a Homogeneous Mixture
[edit]The basic properties of solutions are as drafted under:[citation needed]
- All solutions are the examples of homogeneous mixture.
- The particles of a homogeneous mixture are less than one nanometre in size.
- A homogeneous mixture does not show Tyndall effect.
- The constituent of homogeneous mixture cannot be separated using centrifugation or decantation.
Heterogeneous mixtures
[edit]Examples of heterogeneous mixtures are emulsions and foams. In most cases, the mixture consists of two main constituents. For an emulsion, these are immiscible fluids such as water and oil. For a foam, these are a solid and a fluid, or a liquid and a gas. On larger scales both constituents are present in any region of the mixture, and in a well-mixed mixture in the same or only slightly varying concentrations. On a microscopic scale, however, one of the constituents is absent in almost any sufficiently small region. (If such absence is common on macroscopic scales, the combination of the constituents is a dispersed medium, not a mixture.) One can distinguish different characteristics of heterogeneous mixtures by the presence or absence of continuum percolation of their constituents. For a foam, a distinction is made between reticulated foam in which one constituent forms a connected network through which the other can freely percolate, or a closed-cell foam in which one constituent is present as trapped in small cells whose walls are formed by the other constituents. A similar distinction is possible for emulsions. In many emulsions, one constituent is present in the form of isolated regions of typically a globular shape, dispersed throughout the other constituent. However, it is also possible each constituent forms a large, connected network. Such a mixture is then called bicontinuous.[13]
Distinguishing between mixture types
[edit]Making a distinction between homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures is a matter of the scale of sampling. On a coarse enough scale, any mixture can be said to be homogeneous, if the entire article is allowed to count as a "sample" of it. On a fine enough scale, any mixture can be said to be heterogeneous, because a sample could be as small as a single molecule. In practical terms, if the property of interest of the mixture is the same regardless of which sample of it is taken for the examination used, the mixture is homogeneous.
Gy's sampling theory quantitatively defines the heterogeneity of a particle as:[14]
where , , , , and are respectively: the heterogeneity of the th particle of the population, the mass concentration of the property of interest in the th particle of the population, the mass concentration of the property of interest in the population, the mass of the th particle in the population, and the average mass of a particle in the population.
During sampling of heterogeneous mixtures of particles, the variance of the sampling error is generally non-zero.
Pierre Gy derived, from the Poisson sampling model, the following formula for the variance of the sampling error in the mass concentration in a sample:
in which V is the variance of the sampling error, N is the number of particles in the population (before the sample was taken), q i is the probability of including the ith particle of the population in the sample (i.e. the first-order inclusion probability of the ith particle), m i is the mass of the ith particle of the population and a i is the mass concentration of the property of interest in the ith particle of the population.
The above equation for the variance of the sampling error is an approximation based on a linearization of the mass concentration in a sample.
In the theory of Gy, correct sampling is defined as a sampling scenario in which all particles have the same probability of being included in the sample. This implies that q i no longer depends on i, and can therefore be replaced by the symbol q. Gy's equation for the variance of the sampling error becomes:
where abatch is that concentration of the property of interest in the population from which the sample is to be drawn and Mbatch is the mass of the population from which the sample is to be drawn.
Health effects
[edit]Air pollution research[15][16] show biological and health effects after exposure to mixtures are more potent than effects from exposures of individual components.[17]
Homogenization
[edit]Properties of a mixture
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "mixture". doi:10.1351/goldbook.M03949
- ^ Whitten K.W., Gailey K. D. and Davis R. E. (1992). General chemistry (4th ed.). Philadelphia: Saunders College Publishing. ISBN 978-0-03-072373-5.[page needed]
- ^ Petrucci, Ralph H.; Harwood, William S.; Herring, F. Geography (2002). General chemistry: principles and modern applications (8th ed.). Upper Saddle River, N.J: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-014329-7. LCCN 2001032331. OCLC 46872308.[page needed]
- ^ De Paula, Julio; Atkins, P. W. (2002). Atkins' Physical Chemistry (7th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-879285-7.[page needed]
- ^ Alberts B.; et al. (2002). Molecular Biology of the Cell, 4th Ed. Garland Science. ISBN 978-0-8153-4072-0.[page needed]
- ^ Laidler K. J. (1978). Physical chemistry with biological applications. Menlo Park: Benjamin/Cummings. ISBN 978-0-8053-5680-9.[page needed]
- ^ Weast R. C., Ed. (1990). CRC Handbook of chemistry and physics. Boca Raton: Chemical Rubber Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-8493-0470-5.[page needed]
- ^ Pleasants, Julian M, ed. (2017). "A Call to Duty: The Selective Service Act of 1940". Home Front. doi:10.5744/florida/9780813054254.003.0003. ISBN 978-0-8130-5425-4.
- ^ Ashworth, William; Little, Charles E., eds. (2001). "Mixture". The Encyclopedia of Environmental Studies. Facts on File.
- ^ "Definition of mixture - Chemistry Dictionary". www.chemicool.com. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
- ^ a b Everett, D. H. (23 July 1971). Manual of Symbols and Terminology for Physicochemical Quantities and Units. Appendix II Definitions, Terminology and Symbols in Colloid and Surface Chemistry. Part I (PDF) (Report). London: International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry: Division of Physical Chemistry. Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 October 2016. Retrieved 28 October 2016.
- ^ Ashworth, William; Little, Charles E. (2001). "Solution (chemistry)". Encyclopedia of Studies, New Edition. Online publisher: Science Online. Facts on File, Inc.
- ^ Sahimi, Muhammad (26 May 2006). Heterogeneous Materials I: Linear Transport and Optical Properties. Springer. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-387-21705-5.
- ^ Gy, P (1979). Sampling of Particulate Materials: Theory and Practice. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
- ^ US EPA, ORD. "Exposure and Health Effects of Mixtures of Air Pollutants". 19january2017snapshot.epa.gov. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
- ^ Institute, Health Effects (9 March 2016). "Multipollutant Mixtures". Health Effects Institute. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
- ^ Majumder, Nairrita; Kodali, Vamsi; Velayutham, Murugesan; Goldsmith, Travis; Amedro, Jessica; Khramtsov, Valery V; Erdely, Aaron; Nurkiewicz, Timothy R; Harkema, Jack R; Kelley, Eric E; Hussain, Salik (27 October 2022). "Aerosol physicochemical determinants of carbon black and ozone inhalation co-exposure induced pulmonary toxicity". Toxicological Sciences. 191 (1): 61–78. doi:10.1093/toxsci/kfac113. ISSN 1096-6080. PMC 9887725. PMID 36303316.
- IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "mixture". doi:10.1351/goldbook.M03949