Re: TOJC: azeotrope

Craig Fryhle (fryhle@u.washington.edu)
Thu, 5 Dec 1996 12:34:26 -0800 (PST)

Kevin, Yes, that's it, except I think you meant boiling point not melting
point.

CBF

On Thu, 5 Dec 1996 michelks@PLU.edu wrote:

> Heather,
> The way I understand axeotrope is that it is a mixture of two different
> solutions and the mixture has a melting point that is either above or
> below BOTH of the two solutions that were originally mixed.I don't know if
> I helped but I hope I did.
> Kevin Michels
>
> On Thu, 5 Dec 1996 mundenhj@plu.edu wrote:
>
> > HI, I was reading looking over chapter ten for the test and came across
> > the word, azeotrope (sect. 10.3b), the book really does not elabirate on
> > the word anymore, and I was wondering if someone out there in chem land
> > could explain this word further to me.
> > thanks
> > Heather
> >
> >
>
>

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Craig B. Fryhle, Ph.D. Office 206-535-8314 FAX 206-536-5055
Associate Professor Email fryhle@u.washington.edu
Department of Chemistry URL http://rainier.chem.plu.edu/fryhle.html
Pacific Lutheran University
Tacoma, Washington 98447 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^
^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^