fluorene is mobile phase and fluorenone is statio.pdf
karan8801
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Apr 09, 2023
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fluorene is mobile phase and fluorenone is stationary phase because : Mostly,it
depends on the solvent you are using, but lets assume you use pentane as the solvent for fluorene
and diethyl ether as the solvent for fluorenone. Used in this order, fluorene should actaully move
slower down the column ...
fluorene is mobile phase and fluorenone is stationary phase because : Mostly,it
depends on the solvent you are using, but lets assume you use pentane as the solvent for fluorene
and diethyl ether as the solvent for fluorenone. Used in this order, fluorene should actaully move
slower down the column due to the the polarity of the alumina and the nonpolarity of the solvent
(pentane). Since fluorene is less polar so, remember the rule like dissolves like? Well, this kind
of applies to chromatography wherein rather than dissolve just replace it with moves with, so like
moves with like. That being said the pentane will \"carry\" the fluorene through the alumina
slower than the latter (which I will explain). Fluorenone is polar because of its C=O bond, that
being said the dielectric constant of diethyl ether is 4.3 which means it has intermediate polarity
(remember that pentane has a dielectric constant of 2.1 I think, so it is nonpolar). Since the
alumina, diethyl ether, and the fluorenone are all polar, the fluorenone will travel faster through
the alumina than would the fluorene, because there is no attraction between all these polar
compounds which will allow it to move faster, rather than a nonpolar and polar chemical having
an attration towards each other and thus moving more slowly.
Solution
fluorene is mobile phase and fluorenone is stationary phase because : Mostly,it
depends on the solvent you are using, but lets assume you use pentane as the solvent for fluorene
and diethyl ether as the solvent for fluorenone. Used in this order, fluorene should actaully move
slower down the column due to the the polarity of the alumina and the nonpolarity of the solvent
(pentane). Since fluorene is less polar so, remember the rule like dissolves like? Well, this kind
of applies to chromatography wherein rather than dissolve just replace it with moves with, so like
moves with like. That being said the pentane will \"carry\" the fluorene through the alumina
slower than the latter (which I will explain). Fluorenone is polar because of its C=O bond, that
being said the dielectric constant of diethyl ether is 4.3 which means it has intermediate polarity
(remember that pentane has a dielectric constant of 2.1 I think, so it is nonpolar). Since the
alumina, diethyl ether, and the fluorenone are all polar, the fluorenone will travel faster through
the alumina than would the fluorene, because there is no attraction between all these polar
compounds which will allow it to move faster, rather than a nonpolar and polar chemical having
an attration towards each other and thus moving more slowly..
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Added: Apr 09, 2023
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Slide Content
fluorene is mobile phase and fluorenone is stationary phase because : Mostly,it
depends on the solvent you are using, but lets assume you use pentane as the solvent for fluorene
and diethyl ether as the solvent for fluorenone. Used in this order, fluorene should actaully move
slower down the column due to the the polarity of the alumina and the nonpolarity of the solvent
(pentane). Since fluorene is less polar so, remember the rule like dissolves like? Well, this kind
of applies to chromatography wherein rather than dissolve just replace it with moves with, so like
moves with like. That being said the pentane will \"carry\" the fluorene through the alumina
slower than the latter (which I will explain). Fluorenone is polar because of its C=O bond, that
being said the dielectric constant of diethyl ether is 4.3 which means it has intermediate polarity
(remember that pentane has a dielectric constant of 2.1 I think, so it is nonpolar). Since the
alumina, diethyl ether, and the fluorenone are all polar, the fluorenone will travel faster through
the alumina than would the fluorene, because there is no attraction between all these polar
compounds which will allow it to move faster, rather than a nonpolar and polar chemical having
an attration towards each other and thus moving more slowly.
Solution
fluorene is mobile phase and fluorenone is stationary phase because : Mostly,it
depends on the solvent you are using, but lets assume you use pentane as the solvent for fluorene
and diethyl ether as the solvent for fluorenone. Used in this order, fluorene should actaully move
slower down the column due to the the polarity of the alumina and the nonpolarity of the solvent
(pentane). Since fluorene is less polar so, remember the rule like dissolves like? Well, this kind
of applies to chromatography wherein rather than dissolve just replace it with moves with, so like
moves with like. That being said the pentane will \"carry\" the fluorene through the alumina
slower than the latter (which I will explain). Fluorenone is polar because of its C=O bond, that
being said the dielectric constant of diethyl ether is 4.3 which means it has intermediate polarity
(remember that pentane has a dielectric constant of 2.1 I think, so it is nonpolar). Since the
alumina, diethyl ether, and the fluorenone are all polar, the fluorenone will travel faster through
the alumina than would the fluorene, because there is no attraction between all these polar
compounds which will allow it to move faster, rather than a nonpolar and polar chemical having
an attration towards each other and thus moving more slowly.