Jump to content

Molar concentration

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Molarity)

Molar concentration, or molarity, or simply concentration, is a term in chemistry, and its physical chemistry branch. It measures the concentration of a solution or mixture.

In chemistry, the molar concentration, <math>c_i</math> is defined as the amount of a constituent <math>n_i</math> (usually measured in moles – hence the name) divided by the volume of the mixture <math>V</math>:[1]

<math>c_i = \frac {n_i}{V}</math>

The volume <math>V</math> in the definition <math>c_i = n_i/V</math> refers to the volume of the solution, not the volume of the solvent. One litre of a solution usually contains either slightly more or slightly less than 1 litre of solvent because when a substance dissolves in a solvent it causes volume of liquid to increase or decrease.

The reciprocal quantity represents the dilution (volume) which can appear in Ostwald's law of dilution.

References[change]

  1. International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. Amount concentration, c. Compendium of chemical terminology, internet edition. [1]

Other websites[change]