10.08
It is the rate of flow for each color. It is calculated by taking the value for the measured from the initial color mark to the solvent front (value A) and then the distance from the initial spot to each of the centers of the color marks separated (value B). You then divide B by A. For example, solvent front for black felt tip pen is 5.4cm and the distance for value B is .9 cm. The rf for this problem is .9cm/5.4 cm = .17 (Rf factor is a unitless number)
The Rf value is the "ratio to the front." Hence the R and the f. It is defined as the ration of the distance traveled by a spot (measured from the center) to the distance traveled by the solvent.
No, the solubility of the pigment molecule in its organic solvent is a factor involved in the separation of pigments. More soluble molecules move faster and generally travel further. Chlorophyll B is a great example since its only soluble in fat solutions.
The force increases by a factor of 4. If we're talking about gravity, the gravitational force is a function of the masses and the square of the distance between them. As distance decreased by a factor of 2 (since it was cut in half), then the force increases by a factor of 2 squared, and that's 4. Gravitational force increases by a factor of 4 when distance between two gravimetrically attracted objects is decreased by a factor of 2 (cut in half).
The retention factor is a ratio used in columnar chromatography. A small RF number signifies that the molecule crossed a small distance from the origin of applied pigments.
Rf is nothing but retardation factor in paper chromatography.Rf= distance spot traveled/distance solvent traveled
The Rf values do not indicate the solubility of a substance. The Rf value or retardation factor is the ratio of the distance traveled by the center of a pot to the distance traveled by the solvent front in chromatography.
Rf= distance travelled by pigment (cm)/distance travlled by solvent (cm)
It is the rate of flow for each color. It is calculated by taking the value for the measured from the initial color mark to the solvent front (value A) and then the distance from the initial spot to each of the centers of the color marks separated (value B). You then divide B by A. For example, solvent front for black felt tip pen is 5.4cm and the distance for value B is .9 cm. The rf for this problem is .9cm/5.4 cm = .17 (Rf factor is a unitless number)
The Rf value is the "ratio to the front." Hence the R and the f. It is defined as the ration of the distance traveled by a spot (measured from the center) to the distance traveled by the solvent.
Retention Factor Rf == Distance traveled / total distance
Retention Factor Rf == Distance traveled / total distance
The retention factor of a particular material is the ratio of the distance the spot moved above the origin to the distance the solvent front moved above the origin.
Rf Values determine the solubility of a substance with respect to a certain solvent. It also determines the affinity of the solute to the solvent (greater Rf=greater affinity of solute to the solvent)
No, the solubility of the pigment molecule in its organic solvent is a factor involved in the separation of pigments. More soluble molecules move faster and generally travel further. Chlorophyll B is a great example since its only soluble in fat solutions.
Rf value. polarity of solvent
Response Details:1) factor that affects the Rf value of TLC is the polarity of the solvent. If the solvent is too polar all of the compounds can run right up the plate resulting in poor separation.2) The RF value is used to established the identity of the spots of TLC plate.3) The RF value is ratio of the distance the solvent travels to the distance compound travels.4) The factors can affect RF values. The absorbent uniformity on the thin layer plate, same concentration(spotting is too weak or strong), room temperature during the mobile phase and development distance of the solvent during the mobile phase can all affect the results.5) Multiple solvent system are necessory when utilizing TLC for identification purposes.Response Details:1) factor that affects the Rf value of TLC is the polarity of the solvent. If the solvent is too polar all of the compounds can run right up the plate resulting in poor separation.2) The RF value is used to established the identity of the spots of TLC plate.3) The RF value is ratio of the distance the solvent travels to the distance compound travels.4) The factors can affect RF values. The absorbent uniformity on the thin layer plate, same concentration(spotting is too weak or strong), room temperature during the mobile phase and development distance of the solvent during the mobile phase can all affect the results.5) Multiple solvent system are necessory when utilizing TLC for identification purposes.