Vidal ebullioscope

In physics, an ebullioscope (from Latin ēbullīre 'to boil') is an instrument for measuring the boiling point of a liquid. This can be used for determining the alcoholic strength of a mixture, or for determining the molecular weight of a non-volatile solute based on the boiling-point elevation. The procedure is known as ebullioscopy.

The first ebullioscope was invented in 1838 by Honoré Brossard-Vidal, and was used for measuring alcoholic content. The advantage of this method was that the boiling point is relatively insensitive to other components such as sugars. Older alcoholimeters were based on measuring the density, which is more sensitive to the presence of other solutes.[1][2]

A famous ebullioscope variant was built by Pierre Marie Edouard Malligand, patented in 1876.[3] The device is used by winemakers still to this day to measure the alcohol contents of wines, using the "Malligand degree" (M°) as a unit of measure.[citation needed]

A later version was built by the French chemist François-Marie Raoult,[4] but the difficulty of determining the exact temperature was overcome by the invention of the Beckmann thermometer by Ernst Otto Beckmann in 1887.[5] This improvement made the ebullioscope a standard apparatus to determine the molecular weight of substances in solution by using the ebullioscopic constant of the solvent.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ See:
    • P. Doré. Leçons de chimie élémentaire appliquées aux arts industriels …, (Paris, France: Victor Dalmont, 1857), pages 323-325.
    • Brossard Vidal, Observations sur les instruments de l'administration et du commerce pour reconnaître la richesse alcoolique des liquides spiritueux (Paris, France: A. Henry, 1842)
    • Ad. Chambon (1845), "Considérations sur l'Ebullioscope alcoométrique de MM. Vaille et Vidal Brossard," Répertoire des Travaux de la Société de Statisque, 8 : 93-98.
    • Louis-François Desbordes and Honoré Brossard-Vidal, "alcoomètre Vidal," French patent 415 (filed: November 23, 1844; issued: June 18, 1845), Bulletin des lois du Royaume de France (1846), 9th series, vol. 31, page 72.
  2. ^ See:
  3. ^ Pierre M. E. Malligand - Improvement in Ebullioscope, No. 173 128, February 8 1876 [1]
  4. ^ R. Lespieau (1890) "Sur l'ébullioscope de M. Raoult," Bulletin de la Société chimique de France, 3rd series, 3 : 855-858.
  5. ^ Ernst Beckmann (1888) "Über die Methode der Molekulargewichtsbestimmung durch Gefrierpunkterneidrigung" (On the method for the determination of molecular weights by freezing point depression), Zeitschrift der Physikalische Chemie, 2 : 638-715; see especially p. 644.

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Colligative properties

addition of a non-volatile solute, and the elevation can be measured by ebullioscopy. It is found that Δ T b = T b , solution − T b , pure solvent = i ⋅ K

Ebullioscopic constant

Through the procedure called ebullioscopy, a known constant can be used to calculate an unknown molar mass. The term ebullioscopy means "boiling measurement"

Cryoscopic constant

of those particles. Cryoscopy is related to, and is the opposite of ebullioscopy, which determines the same value from the ebullioscopic constant (of

Molecular mass

refractive index with concentration. Cryoscopy and cryoscopic constant Ebullioscopy and ebullioscopic constant Dumas method of molecular weight determination

Boiling-point elevation

or the molar mass of the solute. This kind of measurement is called ebullioscopy (Latin-Greek, "boiling-viewing"). However, superheating is a factor that

Diaminomaleonitrile

with the formula (HCN)x. It was identified as the tetramer (HCN)4 by ebullioscopy in 1923. The cis-configuration of the amino groups was shown in 1928

Dumas method of molecular weight determination

determined at the working temperature Victor Meyer apparatus Cryoscopy and ebullioscopy, two other methods for the determination of molecular weights Darrell

Alan W. C. Menzies

Sydney L. (1921). "The Application of a Differential Thermometer in Ebullioscopy". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 43 (11): 2314–2323. doi:10