different between azeotrope vs azeotropically

azeotrope

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ?- (a-, no) + ????? (zéein, to boil) + ?????? (trópos, state).

Noun

azeotrope (plural azeotropes)

  1. (physics) A mixture of two or more substances whose liquid and gaseous forms have the same composition (at a certain pressure); the substances cannot be separated by normal distillation.
    • 1999, Fouad M. Khoury, Predicting the Performance of Multistage Separation Processes, 2nd Edition, page 289,
      The formation of azeotropes due to deviations from Raoult's law was discussed in Section 1.3. An azeotrope is a mixture that, at a given pressure (the azeotropic pressure), boils at a constant temperature (the azeotropic temperature), and has the same composition (the azeotropic composition) in the equilibrium vapor and liquid phases. Homogeneous azeotropes are those that form one liquid phase at equilibrium with the vapor; heterogeneous azeotropes are those that form two liquid phases at equilibrium with each other and the vapor.
    • The presence of a unitary azeotrope curve is not a prerequisite for the generation of a ternary azeotrope.
    • 2006, Marc Pansu, Jacques Gautheyrou, Handbook of Soil Analysis: Mineralogical, Organic and Inorganic Methods, page 903,
      As the boiling point of HCl–H2O azeotrope is lower than that of azeotrope (HNO3–H2O), hydrochloric acid can be eliminated efficiently by successive evaporations with nitric acid.

Related terms

  • azeotropic
  • azeotropy
  • zeotrope

Translations

See also

  • eutectic
  • extractive distillation
  • salt-effect distillation

German

Pronunciation

Adjective

azeotrope

  1. inflection of azeotrop:
    1. strong/mixed nominative/accusative feminine singular
    2. strong nominative/accusative plural
    3. weak nominative all-gender singular
    4. weak accusative feminine/neuter singular

azeotrope From the web:



azeotropically

English

Etymology

azeotropic +? -ally

Adverb

azeotropically (not comparable)

  1. By the use of an azeotrope.

azeotropically From the web:

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