Azeotrope
An azeotrope is a liquid mixture of two or more components which has a unique constant boiling point. This boiling point may be higher or lower than the boiling points of the constituent liquids, and the liquid retains the same composition as it is boiled. As a consequence, the vapor has the same composition as the liquid and simple distillation will not separate the constituents as it would with most liquid mixtures. Technically speaking, perfect azeotropic behavior occurs only at a precise temperature and pressure, but many mixtures are near-perfect azeotropes across a wide range of conditions.The word azeotrope comes from the Greek "zein tropos", or "constant boiling". An azeotrope is said to be positive if the constant boiling point is at a temperature maximum, and negative when the boiling point is at a temperature minimum.
Examples of azeotropes :
- nitric acid (68.4%) / water, boils at 122ÃÂðC
- perchloric acid (28.4%) / water, boils at 203ÃÂðC (negative azeotrope)
- fluorhydric acid (35.6%) / water, boils at 111.35ÃÂðC (negative azeotrope)
- ethanol (95%) / water, boils at 78.2ÃÂðC
- sulphuric acid (98.3%) /water, boils at 330ÃÂðC