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Freezing-point depression

Freezing-point depression is a drop in the maximum temperature at which a substance freezes, caused when a smaller amount of another, non-volatile substance is added. Examples include adding salt into water (used in ice cream makers and for de-icing roads), alcohol in water, ethylene or propylene glycol in water (used in antifreeze in cars), adding copper to molten silver (used to make solder that flows at a lower temperature than the silver pieces being joined), or the mixing of two solids such as impurities into a finely powdered drug.

Workers spreading salt from a salt truck for deicing the road.
Freezing point depression is responsible for keeping ice cream soft below 0°C.[1]

In all cases, the substance added/present in smaller amounts is considered the solute, while the original substance present in larger quantity is thought of as the solvent. The resulting liquid solution or solid-solid mixture has a lower freezing point than the pure solvent or solid because the chemical potential of the solvent in the mixture is lower than that of the pure solvent, the difference between the two being proportional to the natural logarithm of the mole fraction. In a similar manner, the chemical potential of the vapor above the solution is lower than that above a pure solvent, which results in boiling-point elevation. Freezing-point depression is what causes sea water (a mixture of salt and other compounds in water) to remain liquid at temperatures below 0 °C (32 °F), the freezing point of pure water.

Explanation edit

Using vapour pressure edit

The freezing point is the temperature at which the liquid solvent and solid solvent are at equilibrium, so that their vapor pressures are equal. When a non-volatile solute is added to a volatile liquid solvent, the solution vapour pressure will be lower than that of the pure solvent. As a result, the solid will reach equilibrium with the solution at a lower temperature than with the pure solvent.[2] This explanation in terms of vapor pressure is equivalent to the argument based on chemical potential, since the chemical potential of a vapor is logarithmically related to pressure. All of the colligative properties result from a lowering of the chemical potential of the solvent in the presence of a solute. This lowering is an entropy effect. The greater randomness of the solution (as compared to the pure solvent) acts in opposition to freezing, so that a lower temperature must be reached, over a broader range, before equilibrium between the liquid solution and solid solution phases is achieved. Melting point determinations are commonly exploited in organic chemistry to aid in identifying substances and to ascertain their purity.

Due to concentration and entropy edit

In the liquid solution, the solvent is diluted by the addition of a solute, so that fewer molecules are available to freeze (a lower concentration of solvent exists in a solution versus pure solvent). Re-establishment of equilibrium is achieved at a lower temperature at which the rate of freezing becomes equal to the rate of liquefying. The solute is not occluding or preventing the solvent from solidifying, it is simply diluting it so there is a reduced probability of a solvent making an attempt at freezing in any given moment.

At the lower freezing point, the vapor pressure of the liquid is equal to the vapor pressure of the corresponding solid, and the chemical potentials of the two phases are equal as well.

Uses edit

The phenomenon of freezing-point depression has many practical uses. The radiator fluid in an automobile is a mixture of water and ethylene glycol. The freezing-point depression prevents radiators from freezing in winter. Road salting takes advantage of this effect to lower the freezing point of the ice it is placed on. Lowering the freezing point allows the street ice to melt at lower temperatures, preventing the accumulation of dangerous, slippery ice. Commonly used sodium chloride can depress the freezing point of water to about −21 °C (−6 °F). If the road surface temperature is lower, NaCl becomes ineffective and other salts are used, such as calcium chloride, magnesium chloride or a mixture of many. These salts are somewhat aggressive to metals, especially iron, so in airports safer media such as sodium formate, potassium formate, sodium acetate, and potassium acetate are used instead.

 
Pre-treating roads with salt relies on the warmer road surface to initially melt the snow and make a solution; Pre-treatment of bridges (which are colder than roads) does not typically work.[3]
 
Dissolved solutes prevent sap and other fluids in trees from freezing in winter.[4]

Freezing-point depression is used by some organisms that live in extreme cold. Such creatures have evolved means through which they can produce a high concentration of various compounds such as sorbitol and glycerol. This elevated concentration of solute decreases the freezing point of the water inside them, preventing the organism from freezing solid even as the water around them freezes, or as the air around them becomes very cold. Examples of organisms that produce antifreeze compounds include some species of arctic-living fish such as the rainbow smelt, which produces glycerol and other molecules to survive in frozen-over estuaries during the winter months.[5] In other animals, such as the spring peeper frog (Pseudacris crucifer), the molality is increased temporarily as a reaction to cold temperatures. In the case of the peeper frog, freezing temperatures trigger a large-scale breakdown of glycogen in the frog's liver and subsequent release of massive amounts of glucose into the blood.[6] With the formula below, freezing-point depression can be used to measure the degree of dissociation or the molar mass of the solute. This kind of measurement is called cryoscopy (Greek cryo = cold, scopos = observe; "observe the cold"[7]) and relies on exact measurement of the freezing point. The degree of dissociation is measured by determining the van 't Hoff factor i by first determining mB and then comparing it to msolute. In this case, the molar mass of the solute must be known. The molar mass of a solute is determined by comparing mB with the amount of solute dissolved. In this case, i must be known, and the procedure is primarily useful for organic compounds using a nonpolar solvent. Cryoscopy is no longer as common a measurement method as it once was, but it was included in textbooks at the turn of the 20th century. As an example, it was still taught as a useful analytic procedure in Cohen's Practical Organic Chemistry of 1910,[8] in which the molar mass of naphthalene is determined using a Beckmann freezing apparatus.

Laboratory uses edit

Freezing-point depression can also be used as a purity analysis tool when analyzed by differential scanning calorimetry. The results obtained are in mol%, but the method has its place, where other methods of analysis fail.

In the laboratory, lauric acid may be used to investigate the molar mass of an unknown substance via the freezing-point depression. The choice of lauric acid is convenient because the melting point of the pure compound is relatively high (43.8 °C). Its cryoscopic constant is 3.9 °C·kg/mol. By melting lauric acid with the unknown substance, allowing it to cool, and recording the temperature at which the mixture freezes, the molar mass of the unknown compound may be determined.[9][citation needed]

This is also the same principle acting in the melting-point depression observed when the melting point of an impure solid mixture is measured with a melting-point apparatus since melting and freezing points both refer to the liquid-solid phase transition (albeit in different directions).

In principle, the boiling-point elevation and the freezing-point depression could be used interchangeably for this purpose. However, the cryoscopic constant is larger than the ebullioscopic constant, and the freezing point is often easier to measure with precision, which means measurements using the freezing-point depression are more precise.

FPD measurements are also used in the dairy industry to ensure that milk has not had extra water added. Milk with a FPD of over 0.509 °C is considered to be unadulterated.[10]

Formula edit

For dilute solution edit

 
Freezing temperature of seawater at different pressures and some substances as a function of salinity. See image description for source.

If the solution is treated as an ideal solution, the extent of freezing-point depression depends only on the solute concentration that can be estimated by a simple linear relationship with the cryoscopic constant ("Blagden's Law").

 
 

where:

  •   is the decrease in freezing point, defined as the freezing point   of the pure solvent minus the freezing point   of the solution, as the formula above results in a positive value given that all factors are positive. From the   calculated using the formula above, the freezing point of the solution can then be calculated as  .
  •  , the cryoscopic constant, which is dependent on the properties of the solvent, not the solute. (Note: When conducting experiments, a higher k value makes it easier to observe larger drops in the freezing point.)
  •   is the molality (moles of solute per kilogram of solvent)
  •   is the van 't Hoff factor (number of ion particles per formula unit of solute, e.g. i = 2 for NaCl, 3 for BaCl2).

Some values of the cryoscopic constant Kf for selected solvents:[11]

Compound Freezing point (°C) Kf in K⋅kg/mol
Acetic acid 16.6 3.90
Benzene 5.5 5.12
Camphor 179.8 39.7
Carbon disulfide −112 3.8
Carbon tetrachloride −23 30
Chloroform −63.5 4.68
Cyclohexane 6.4 20.2
Ethanol −114.6 1.99
Ethyl ether −116.2 1.79
Naphthalene 80.2 6.9
Phenol 41 7.27
Water 0 1.86[12]

For concentrated solution edit

The simple relation above doesn't consider the nature of the solute, so it is only effective in a diluted solution. For a more accurate calculation at a higher concentration, for ionic solutes, Ge and Wang (2010)[13][14] proposed a new equation:

 

In the above equation, TF is the normal freezing point of the pure solvent (273 K for water, for example); aliq is the activity of the solvent in the solution (water activity for aqueous solution); ΔHfusTF is the enthalpy change of fusion of the pure solvent at TF, which is 333.6 J/g for water at 273 K; ΔCfusp is the difference between the heat capacities of the liquid and solid phases at TF, which is 2.11 J/(g·K) for water.

The solvent activity can be calculated from the Pitzer model or modified TCPC model, which typically requires 3 adjustable parameters. For the TCPC model, these parameters are available[15][16][17][18] for many single salts.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Controlling the hardness of ice cream, gelato and similar frozen desserts". Food Science and Technology. 2021-03-18. doi:10.1002/fsat.3510_3.x. ISSN 1475-3324. S2CID 243583017.
  2. ^ Petrucci, Ralph H.; Harwood, William S.; Herring, F. Geoffrey (2002). General Chemistry (8th ed.). Prentice-Hall. pp. 557–558. ISBN 0-13-014329-4.
  3. ^ Pollock, Julie. "Salt Doesn't Melt Ice—Here's How It Makes Winter Streets Safer". Scientific American.
  4. ^ Ray, C. Claiborne (2002-02-05). "Q & A". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-02-10.
  5. ^ Treberg, J. R.; Wilson, C. E.; Richards, R. C.; Ewart, K. V.; Driedzic, W. R. (2002). "The freeze-avoidance response of smelt Osmerus mordax: initiation and subsequent suppression 6353". The Journal of Experimental Biology. 205 (Pt 10): 1419–1427. doi:10.1242/jeb.205.10.1419. PMID 11976353.
  6. ^ L. Sherwood et al., Animal Physiology: From Genes to Organisms, 2005, Thomson Brooks/Cole, Belmont, CA, ISBN 0-534-55404-0, p. 691–692.
  7. ^ BIOETYMOLOGY – Biomedical Terms of Greek Origin. cryoscopy. bioetymology.blogspot.com.
  8. ^ Cohen, Julius B. (1910). Practical Organic Chemistry. London: MacMillan and Co.
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-08-03. Retrieved 2019-07-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ . Dairy UK. 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-02-23.
  11. ^ Atkins, P. W. (1990). Physical Chemistry (4th ed.). Freeman. p. C17 (Table 7.2). ISBN 978-0716720737.
  12. ^ Aylward, Gordon; Findlay, Tristan (2002), SI Chemical Data 5th ed. (5 ed.), Sweden: John Wiley & Sons, p. 202, ISBN 0-470-80044-5
  13. ^ Ge, Xinlei; Wang, Xidong (2009). "Estimation of Freezing Point Depression, Boiling Point Elevation, and Vaporization Enthalpies of Electrolyte Solutions". Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research. 48 (10): 5123. doi:10.1021/ie900434h. ISSN 0888-5885.
  14. ^ Ge, Xinlei; Wang, Xidong (2009). "Calculations of Freezing Point Depression, Boiling Point Elevation, Vapor Pressure and Enthalpies of Vaporization of Electrolyte Solutions by a Modified Three-Characteristic Parameter Correlation Model". Journal of Solution Chemistry. 38 (9): 1097–1117. doi:10.1007/s10953-009-9433-0. ISSN 0095-9782. S2CID 96186176.
  15. ^ Ge, Xinlei; Wang, Xidong; Zhang, Mei; Seetharaman, Seshadri (2007). "Correlation and Prediction of Activity and Osmotic Coefficients of Aqueous Electrolytes at 298.15 K by the Modified TCPC Model". Journal of Chemical & Engineering Data. 52 (2): 538–547. doi:10.1021/je060451k. ISSN 0021-9568.
  16. ^ Ge, Xinlei; Zhang, Mei; Guo, Min; Wang, Xidong (2008). "Correlation and Prediction of Thermodynamic Properties of Some Complex Aqueous Electrolytes by the Modified Three-Characteristic-Parameter Correlation Model". Journal of Chemical & Engineering Data. 53 (4): 950–958. doi:10.1021/je7006499. ISSN 0021-9568.
  17. ^ Ge, Xinlei; Zhang, Mei; Guo, Min; Wang, Xidong (2008). "Correlation and Prediction of Thermodynamic Properties of Nonaqueous Electrolytes by the Modified TCPC Model". Journal of Chemical & Engineering Data. 53 (1): 149–159. doi:10.1021/je700446q. ISSN 0021-9568.
  18. ^ Ge, Xinlei; Wang, Xidong (2009). "A Simple Two-Parameter Correlation Model for Aqueous Electrolyte Solutions across a Wide Range of Temperatures†". Journal of Chemical & Engineering Data. 54 (2): 179–186. doi:10.1021/je800483q. ISSN 0021-9568.

freezing, point, depression, this, article, about, phenomenon, caused, solutes, phenomenon, pure, fluids, supercooling, drop, maximum, temperature, which, substance, freezes, caused, when, smaller, amount, another, volatile, substance, added, examples, include. This article is about the phenomenon caused by solutes For the phenomenon in pure fluids see supercooling Freezing point depression is a drop in the maximum temperature at which a substance freezes caused when a smaller amount of another non volatile substance is added Examples include adding salt into water used in ice cream makers and for de icing roads alcohol in water ethylene or propylene glycol in water used in antifreeze in cars adding copper to molten silver used to make solder that flows at a lower temperature than the silver pieces being joined or the mixing of two solids such as impurities into a finely powdered drug Workers spreading salt from a salt truck for deicing the road Freezing point depression is responsible for keeping ice cream soft below 0 C 1 In all cases the substance added present in smaller amounts is considered the solute while the original substance present in larger quantity is thought of as the solvent The resulting liquid solution or solid solid mixture has a lower freezing point than the pure solvent or solid because the chemical potential of the solvent in the mixture is lower than that of the pure solvent the difference between the two being proportional to the natural logarithm of the mole fraction In a similar manner the chemical potential of the vapor above the solution is lower than that above a pure solvent which results in boiling point elevation Freezing point depression is what causes sea water a mixture of salt and other compounds in water to remain liquid at temperatures below 0 C 32 F the freezing point of pure water Contents 1 Explanation 1 1 Using vapour pressure 1 2 Due to concentration and entropy 2 Uses 2 1 Laboratory uses 3 Formula 3 1 For dilute solution 3 2 For concentrated solution 4 See also 5 ReferencesExplanation editUsing vapour pressure edit The freezing point is the temperature at which the liquid solvent and solid solvent are at equilibrium so that their vapor pressures are equal When a non volatile solute is added to a volatile liquid solvent the solution vapour pressure will be lower than that of the pure solvent As a result the solid will reach equilibrium with the solution at a lower temperature than with the pure solvent 2 This explanation in terms of vapor pressure is equivalent to the argument based on chemical potential since the chemical potential of a vapor is logarithmically related to pressure All of the colligative properties result from a lowering of the chemical potential of the solvent in the presence of a solute This lowering is an entropy effect The greater randomness of the solution as compared to the pure solvent acts in opposition to freezing so that a lower temperature must be reached over a broader range before equilibrium between the liquid solution and solid solution phases is achieved Melting point determinations are commonly exploited in organic chemistry to aid in identifying substances and to ascertain their purity Due to concentration and entropy edit In the liquid solution the solvent is diluted by the addition of a solute so that fewer molecules are available to freeze a lower concentration of solvent exists in a solution versus pure solvent Re establishment of equilibrium is achieved at a lower temperature at which the rate of freezing becomes equal to the rate of liquefying The solute is not occluding or preventing the solvent from solidifying it is simply diluting it so there is a reduced probability of a solvent making an attempt at freezing in any given moment At the lower freezing point the vapor pressure of the liquid is equal to the vapor pressure of the corresponding solid and the chemical potentials of the two phases are equal as well Uses editThe phenomenon of freezing point depression has many practical uses The radiator fluid in an automobile is a mixture of water and ethylene glycol The freezing point depression prevents radiators from freezing in winter Road salting takes advantage of this effect to lower the freezing point of the ice it is placed on Lowering the freezing point allows the street ice to melt at lower temperatures preventing the accumulation of dangerous slippery ice Commonly used sodium chloride can depress the freezing point of water to about 21 C 6 F If the road surface temperature is lower NaCl becomes ineffective and other salts are used such as calcium chloride magnesium chloride or a mixture of many These salts are somewhat aggressive to metals especially iron so in airports safer media such as sodium formate potassium formate sodium acetate and potassium acetate are used instead nbsp Pre treating roads with salt relies on the warmer road surface to initially melt the snow and make a solution Pre treatment of bridges which are colder than roads does not typically work 3 nbsp Dissolved solutes prevent sap and other fluids in trees from freezing in winter 4 Freezing point depression is used by some organisms that live in extreme cold Such creatures have evolved means through which they can produce a high concentration of various compounds such as sorbitol and glycerol This elevated concentration of solute decreases the freezing point of the water inside them preventing the organism from freezing solid even as the water around them freezes or as the air around them becomes very cold Examples of organisms that produce antifreeze compounds include some species of arctic living fish such as the rainbow smelt which produces glycerol and other molecules to survive in frozen over estuaries during the winter months 5 In other animals such as the spring peeper frog Pseudacris crucifer the molality is increased temporarily as a reaction to cold temperatures In the case of the peeper frog freezing temperatures trigger a large scale breakdown of glycogen in the frog s liver and subsequent release of massive amounts of glucose into the blood 6 With the formula below freezing point depression can be used to measure the degree of dissociation or the molar mass of the solute This kind of measurement is called cryoscopy Greek cryo cold scopos observe observe the cold 7 and relies on exact measurement of the freezing point The degree of dissociation is measured by determining the van t Hoff factor i by first determining mB and then comparing it to msolute In this case the molar mass of the solute must be known The molar mass of a solute is determined by comparing mB with the amount of solute dissolved In this case i must be known and the procedure is primarily useful for organic compounds using a nonpolar solvent Cryoscopy is no longer as common a measurement method as it once was but it was included in textbooks at the turn of the 20th century As an example it was still taught as a useful analytic procedure in Cohen s Practical Organic Chemistry of 1910 8 in which the molar mass of naphthalene is determined using a Beckmann freezing apparatus Laboratory uses edit Freezing point depression can also be used as a purity analysis tool when analyzed by differential scanning calorimetry The results obtained are in mol but the method has its place where other methods of analysis fail In the laboratory lauric acid may be used to investigate the molar mass of an unknown substance via the freezing point depression The choice of lauric acid is convenient because the melting point of the pure compound is relatively high 43 8 C Its cryoscopic constant is 3 9 C kg mol By melting lauric acid with the unknown substance allowing it to cool and recording the temperature at which the mixture freezes the molar mass of the unknown compound may be determined 9 citation needed This is also the same principle acting in the melting point depression observed when the melting point of an impure solid mixture is measured with a melting point apparatus since melting and freezing points both refer to the liquid solid phase transition albeit in different directions In principle the boiling point elevation and the freezing point depression could be used interchangeably for this purpose However the cryoscopic constant is larger than the ebullioscopic constant and the freezing point is often easier to measure with precision which means measurements using the freezing point depression are more precise FPD measurements are also used in the dairy industry to ensure that milk has not had extra water added Milk with a FPD of over 0 509 C is considered to be unadulterated 10 Formula editFor dilute solution edit nbsp Freezing temperature of seawater at different pressures and some substances as a function of salinity See image description for source If the solution is treated as an ideal solution the extent of freezing point depression depends only on the solute concentration that can be estimated by a simple linear relationship with the cryoscopic constant Blagden s Law D T f Moles of dissolved species Mass of solvent displaystyle Delta T f propto frac text Moles of dissolved species text Mass of solvent nbsp D T f K f b i displaystyle Delta T f K f bi nbsp where D T f displaystyle Delta T f nbsp is the decrease in freezing point defined as the freezing point T f 0 displaystyle T f 0 nbsp of the pure solvent minus the freezing point T f displaystyle T f nbsp of the solution as the formula above results in a positive value given that all factors are positive From the D T f displaystyle Delta T f nbsp calculated using the formula above the freezing point of the solution can then be calculated as T f T f 0 D T f displaystyle T f T f 0 Delta T f nbsp K f displaystyle K f nbsp the cryoscopic constant which is dependent on the properties of the solvent not the solute Note When conducting experiments a higher k value makes it easier to observe larger drops in the freezing point b displaystyle b nbsp is the molality moles of solute per kilogram of solvent i displaystyle i nbsp is the van t Hoff factor number of ion particles per formula unit of solute e g i 2 for NaCl 3 for BaCl2 Some values of the cryoscopic constant Kf for selected solvents 11 Compound Freezing point C Kf in K kg molAcetic acid 16 6 3 90Benzene 5 5 5 12Camphor 179 8 39 7Carbon disulfide 112 3 8Carbon tetrachloride 23 30Chloroform 63 5 4 68Cyclohexane 6 4 20 2Ethanol 114 6 1 99Ethyl ether 116 2 1 79Naphthalene 80 2 6 9Phenol 41 7 27Water 0 1 86 12 For concentrated solution edit The simple relation above doesn t consider the nature of the solute so it is only effective in a diluted solution For a more accurate calculation at a higher concentration for ionic solutes Ge and Wang 2010 13 14 proposed a new equation D T F D H T F fus 2 R T F ln a liq 2 D C p fus T F 2 R ln a liq D H T F fus 2 2 D H T F fus T F D C p fus 2 R ln a liq displaystyle Delta T text F frac Delta H T text F text fus 2RT text F cdot ln a text liq sqrt 2 Delta C p text fus T text F 2 R cdot ln a text liq Delta H T text F text fus 2 2 left frac Delta H T text F text fus T text F frac Delta C p text fus 2 R cdot ln a text liq right nbsp In the above equation TF is the normal freezing point of the pure solvent 273 K for water for example aliq is the activity of the solvent in the solution water activity for aqueous solution DHfusTF is the enthalpy change of fusion of the pure solvent at TF which is 333 6 J g for water at 273 K DCfusp is the difference between the heat capacities of the liquid and solid phases at TF which is 2 11 J g K for water The solvent activity can be calculated from the Pitzer model or modified TCPC model which typically requires 3 adjustable parameters For the TCPC model these parameters are available 15 16 17 18 for many single salts See also editMelting point depression Boiling point elevation Colligative properties Deicing Eutectic point Frigorific mixture List of boiling and freezing information of solvents Snow removalReferences edit Controlling the hardness of ice cream gelato and similar frozen desserts Food Science and Technology 2021 03 18 doi 10 1002 fsat 3510 3 x ISSN 1475 3324 S2CID 243583017 Petrucci Ralph H Harwood William S Herring F Geoffrey 2002 General Chemistry 8th ed Prentice Hall pp 557 558 ISBN 0 13 014329 4 Pollock Julie Salt Doesn t Melt Ice Here s How It Makes Winter Streets Safer Scientific American Ray C Claiborne 2002 02 05 Q amp A The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 02 10 Treberg J R Wilson C E Richards R C Ewart K V Driedzic W R 2002 The freeze avoidance response of smelt Osmerus mordax initiation and subsequent suppression 6353 The Journal of Experimental Biology 205 Pt 10 1419 1427 doi 10 1242 jeb 205 10 1419 PMID 11976353 L Sherwood et al Animal Physiology From Genes to Organisms 2005 Thomson Brooks Cole Belmont CA ISBN 0 534 55404 0 p 691 692 BIOETYMOLOGY Biomedical Terms of Greek Origin cryoscopy bioetymology blogspot com Cohen Julius B 1910 Practical Organic Chemistry London MacMillan and Co Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2020 08 03 Retrieved 2019 07 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Freezing Point Depression of Milk Dairy UK 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 02 23 Atkins P W 1990 Physical Chemistry 4th ed Freeman p C17 Table 7 2 ISBN 978 0716720737 Aylward Gordon Findlay Tristan 2002 SI Chemical Data 5th ed 5 ed Sweden John Wiley amp Sons p 202 ISBN 0 470 80044 5 Ge Xinlei Wang Xidong 2009 Estimation of Freezing Point Depression Boiling Point Elevation and Vaporization Enthalpies of Electrolyte Solutions Industrial amp Engineering Chemistry Research 48 10 5123 doi 10 1021 ie900434h ISSN 0888 5885 Ge Xinlei Wang Xidong 2009 Calculations of Freezing Point Depression Boiling Point Elevation Vapor Pressure and Enthalpies of Vaporization of Electrolyte Solutions by a Modified Three Characteristic Parameter Correlation Model Journal of Solution Chemistry 38 9 1097 1117 doi 10 1007 s10953 009 9433 0 ISSN 0095 9782 S2CID 96186176 Ge Xinlei Wang Xidong Zhang Mei Seetharaman Seshadri 2007 Correlation and Prediction of Activity and Osmotic Coefficients of Aqueous Electrolytes at 298 15 K by the Modified TCPC Model Journal of Chemical amp Engineering Data 52 2 538 547 doi 10 1021 je060451k ISSN 0021 9568 Ge Xinlei Zhang Mei Guo Min Wang Xidong 2008 Correlation and Prediction of Thermodynamic Properties of Some Complex Aqueous Electrolytes by the Modified Three Characteristic Parameter Correlation Model Journal of Chemical amp Engineering Data 53 4 950 958 doi 10 1021 je7006499 ISSN 0021 9568 Ge Xinlei Zhang Mei Guo Min Wang Xidong 2008 Correlation and Prediction of Thermodynamic Properties of Nonaqueous Electrolytes by the Modified TCPC Model Journal of Chemical amp Engineering Data 53 1 149 159 doi 10 1021 je700446q ISSN 0021 9568 Ge Xinlei Wang Xidong 2009 A Simple Two Parameter Correlation Model for Aqueous Electrolyte Solutions across a Wide Range of Temperatures Journal of Chemical amp Engineering Data 54 2 179 186 doi 10 1021 je800483q ISSN 0021 9568 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Freezing point depression amp oldid 1189240612, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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