Physics:Cryoscopic constant

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Short description: Material property relating molality to freezing point depression

In thermodynamics, the cryoscopic constant, Kf, relates molality to freezing point depression (which is a colligative property). It is the ratio of the latter to the former:

[math]\displaystyle{ \Delta T_f = -i \cdot K_f \cdot b }[/math]

Through cryoscopy, a known constant can be used to calculate an unknown molar mass. The term "cryoscopy" comes from Greek and means "freezing measurement." Freezing point depression is a colligative property, so ΔT depends only on the number of solute particles dissolved, not the nature of those particles. Cryoscopy is related to ebullioscopy, which determines the same value from the ebullioscopic constant (of boiling point elevation).

The value of Kf, which depends on the nature of the solvent can be found out by the following equation:

[math]\displaystyle{ K_{f} = \frac{R \cdot M \cdot T_{f}^{2}}{\Delta_\mathrm{fus}H} }[/math]

The Kf for water is 1.853 K kg mol−1.[1]

See also

  • List of boiling and freezing information of solvents

References

  1. Aylward, Gordon; Findlay, Tristan (2002), SI Chemical Data (5 ed.), Sweden: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 202, ISBN 0-470-80044-5