language-icon Old Web
English
Sign In

Molar solubility

Molar solubility is the number of moles of a substance (the solute) that can be dissolved per liter of solution before the solution becomes saturated.It can be calculated from a substance's solubility product constant (Ksp) and stoichiometry. The units are mol/L, sometimes written as M.which, when rearranged for ∆A and ∆B yields:Which condense to the identitiesThese four sets of equations are enough to solve for S0 algebraically: Molar solubility is the number of moles of a substance (the solute) that can be dissolved per liter of solution before the solution becomes saturated.It can be calculated from a substance's solubility product constant (Ksp) and stoichiometry. The units are mol/L, sometimes written as M. Given excess of a simple salt AxBy in an aqueous solution of no common ions (A or B already present in the solution), the amount of it which enters solution can be calculated as follows: The chemical equation for this salt would be:

[ "Solubility", "Aqueous solution", "Solvent" ]
Parent Topic
Child Topic
    No Parent Topic