Well, not ''large'' but yes there is empty volume between them.
When acetone and water are mixed together, they can decrease in volume due to their different molecular structures and interactions. This decrease in volume is caused by the formation of a solution where the molecules of both liquids are able to fill the spaces between each other, resulting in a denser overall volume.
Not quite. In liquids, the relationship between pressure and volume is not as simple as in gases, where there is a direct proportionality. In liquids, the relationship between pressure and volume is influenced by factors such as density and temperature, in addition to volume. So, it is not accurate to say that pressure is directly proportional to volume in liquids.
Solids have a fixed shape and volume, liquids have a fixed volume but take the shape of their container, and gases have neither a fixed shape nor volume and expand to fill their container. The particles in solids are tightly packed, in liquids they are loosely packed, and in gases they are far apart. Additionally, solids have the strongest intermolecular forces, followed by liquids, then gases.
Gases have molecules that are far apart and move freely, taking the shape of their container. Solids have tightly packed molecules in a fixed arrangement, maintaining their shape and volume. Liquids have molecules that are close together but still able to move past each other, taking the shape of their container but maintaining a constant volume.
in solids the molecules are rigid, hard to move, stuck together in liquids they are close together but can still move in gasses theyre far apart with alot of space between molecules, they can move very freely
Liquids are not rigid because the intermolecular forces of attraction between its molecules are not strong enough to hold them as closely as solids, but they are strong enough to ensure that liquids occupy a definite volume.
Different liquids have different densities because of variations in the mass of their molecules and the distance between them. Density is the amount of mass a substance has in a specific volume, so liquids with heavier molecules or more closely packed molecules will have a higher density than those with lighter molecules or more spread-out molecules.
When acetone and water are mixed together, they can decrease in volume due to their different molecular structures and interactions. This decrease in volume is caused by the formation of a solution where the molecules of both liquids are able to fill the spaces between each other, resulting in a denser overall volume.
Not quite. In liquids, the relationship between pressure and volume is not as simple as in gases, where there is a direct proportionality. In liquids, the relationship between pressure and volume is influenced by factors such as density and temperature, in addition to volume. So, it is not accurate to say that pressure is directly proportional to volume in liquids.
Solids have a set volume. Liquids have a set volume. Gases do not have a set volume. Why? Solids are solids. They don't move. They're in a 'frozen state' as is. Liquids 'mold' to the shape of their container and they stay there. Gases are free to go anywhere. Always moving and 'flying.'
The main difference between a liquid and a gas is the constancy of volume. Both are freely flowing, but a liquid will retain a constant volume no matter how much you try to squeeze into a container.
it is the property of the liquids. all the liquids are incompressible. this is because the change in volume due to pressure is negligible for liquids. in liquids the molecules are almost compact and hence no space for compression.
The close arrangement and strong attractive forces between molecules in solids and liquids give them definite volumes. This allows the molecules to maintain a fixed spatial arrangement, leading to a specific volume for the substance.
Properties: liquids have a definite volume but no definite shape.
Solids have a fixed shape and volume, liquids have a fixed volume but take the shape of their container, and gases have neither a fixed shape nor volume and expand to fill their container. The particles in solids are tightly packed, in liquids they are loosely packed, and in gases they are far apart. Additionally, solids have the strongest intermolecular forces, followed by liquids, then gases.
Liquids have more space between molecules than solids and therefore are able to take the shape of the area surrounding them and do not have a shape of their own.
Petrol is a liquid and does not easily compress because its molecules are already close together. When pressure is applied, the molecules can't be pushed closer, so the volume remains relatively constant. Liquids like petrol have more resistance to compression compared to gases.