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The liebig condenser is named after Justus von Liebig, a 19th century German organic chemist, who popularized this device.
If you just draw a schematic representation of it (it's basically a tube inside another tube), most people (at least those that have any hope of understanding the drawing as a whole) will understand what it is. I'm not sure that there's an "official" symbol for it. I can't really draw things here, but check the related links; any chemist would immediately recognize the condenser in that drawing even without the label.Since the Liebig condenser is the simplest possible type, you don't need to do anything "special" to represent it.
So that the the steam of cold water in the outer tube can condense all the vapour which goes inside the inner tube.
Liebig's law of the minimum, often simply called Liebig's law or the law of the minimum, is a principle developed in agricultural science by Carl Sprengel (1828) and later popularized by Justus von Liebig. It states that growth is controlled not by the total amount of resources available, but by the scarcest resource.
What is the liquid that leaves the condenser called
when the Liebig condenser was invented
The liebig condenser is named after Justus von Liebig, a 19th century German organic chemist, who popularized this device.
Only the so-called Liebig condenser.
To keep the Liebig condenser cool so it can condense the vapour
if i had the answer would i ask you
mnikoijjo[uj
The Liebig condenser was named after Justus Baron von Liebig . Since grammar school he was very interested in science and he used chemicals from his fathers dry saltery buseness to help him with his
Liebig condenser, Vigreaux column, Snyder column, West condenser, Allihn condenser, Graham condenser, Dimroth condenser, Friedrichs condenser. There are no shortage of these!
More surface area.
condencer
If you just draw a schematic representation of it (it's basically a tube inside another tube), most people (at least those that have any hope of understanding the drawing as a whole) will understand what it is. I'm not sure that there's an "official" symbol for it. I can't really draw things here, but check the related links; any chemist would immediately recognize the condenser in that drawing even without the label.Since the Liebig condenser is the simplest possible type, you don't need to do anything "special" to represent it.
It is used for separating two liquids the liquid wih the heigher boiling point rises and is condensed.