In can occur if the reaction in question in exothermic. After the stoichiometric point , there is no reactant left to react. No reaction occurs and no heat is evolved and as a result temperature drops.
An endothermic reaction needs heat in the reaction which is taken from the surroundings, thus making the temperature drop in the surroundings.
The temperature drops when the reation reaches the stoichiometric point (equivalence point) because the amounts of the titrant and the analyte have completely reacted.
when the temperature reaches the dew point.
when the temperature reaches the dew point.
Lifting Condensation Level
Clouds begin to form when water vapor reaches the correct: altitude, dew point, and temperature.
The boiling point.
when the temperature reaches the dew point.
When the temperature reaches the correct temperature (boiling point).
'Stoichiometric' means equal amounts according to the balanced reaction. So at that point you have only water where H+ and OH- conc.'s are equal (1.0*10-7)
end point
Dew point
condense
A. boiling point
when its temperature reaches the boiling point.
when the temperature reaches the dew point.
when the temperature reaches the dew point.
The optimal point in statistics refers to the point where a function reaches its maximum or minimum value. In the context of a probability distribution, the optimal point would typically refer to the mean or expected value of the distribution. This point represents the average value of the data and is often used as a measure of central tendency.
The equivalence point, or stoichiometric point, of a chemical reaction is the point at which an added titrant is stoichiometrically equal to the number of moles of substance (known as analyte) present in the sample: the smallest amount of titrant that is sufficient to fully neutralize or react with the analyte.