Yes, it is an intensive property.
14.7kJmol-1
pH is an INTENSIVE property as it does not depend on the amount of material present. The pH of 1 ml of solution x is the same as the pH of 100 ml of solution x.
pH is an INTENSIVE property as it does not depend on the amount of material present. The pH of 1 ml of solution x is the same as the pH of 100 ml of solution x.
enthalpy change of solution=enthalpy change of hydration - enthalpy change of lattice
It is intensive property...it doesnt depend upon size of system, but only the chemical nature of mixture or solution at given temperature and pressure..
The standard enthalpy for the change in solution is: +3,87 kJ/mol at 25 0C
enthalpy is how many miles superman can travel in a day. Regards, Lois Lane
Examples: sodium chloride solution, potassium chloride solution, lithium chloride solution.
This solution contain a specified concentration of sodium chloride.
Silver chloride precipitates from the solution.
If the solution that may contain chloride ions is aqueous, adding a solution of silver nitrate will cause a precipitate of silver chloride. (However, there are many other insoluble silver salts, so that this test is not specific to chloride.)
Salt in water is sodium. Ringer's lactate solution (sodium lactate solution and Hartmann's solution), is a mix of sodium chloride, sodium lactate, potassium chloride, and calcium chloride in water. Sodium Chloride is a mix of sodium and chloride.