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Volatile
Substances
What Is a
Volatile Substance in Chemistry?
Volatility refers to a substance's ability to vaporize
by Anne Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D.
In chemistry, the word "volatile" refers
to a substance that vaporizes readily.
Volatility is a measure of
how readily a substance vaporizes or transitions from a liquid phase to a
gas phase.
The term can also be applied
to the phase change from solid state to vapor, which is called sublimation.
A volatile substance has a
high vapor pressure at a given temperature compared with a nonvolatile compound.
Examples of Volatile Substances
· Mercury is a volatile element. Liquid
mercury had a high vapor pressure, readily releasing particles into the air.
· Dry ice is a volatile inorganic compound that sublimates at room
temperature from the solid phase into carbon dioxide vapor.
· Osmium tetroxide (OsO4) is another volatile inorganic compound that, like dry
ice, transitions from the solid phase to the vapor phase without becoming a
liquid.
· Many organic compounds are volatile. An
example is alcohol. Because volatile substances readily vaporize, they mix with
air and may be smelled (if they have an odor).
Xylene and benzene are two volatile
organic compounds with distinctive scents.
Relationship Between Volatility, Temperature, and
Pressure
The higher the vapor pressure
of a compound, the more volatile it is. Higher vapor pressure and volatility
translate into a lower boiling point.
Increasing temperature increases
vapor pressure, which is the pressure at which the gas phase is in equilibrium
with the liquid or solid phase.
Anne Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D.
· Ph.D.
in biomedical sciences from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville - Oak
Ridge National Laboratory.
· Science
educator with experience teaching chemistry, biology, astronomy, and
physics at the high school, college, and graduate levels.
· ThoughtCo
and About Education chemistry expert since 2001.
· Widely-published
graphic artist, responsible for printable periodic tables and other
illustrations used in science.
Experience
Anne
Helmenstine, Ph.D. has covered chemistry for ThoughtCo and About Education
since 2001, and other sciences since 2013. She taught chemistry, biology,
astronomy, and physics at the high school, college, and graduate levels.
She has worked as a research scientist and also abstracting and indexing
diverse scientific literature for the Department of Energy.
In
addition to her work as a science writer, Dr. Helmenstine currently serves as a
scientific consultant, specializing in problems requiring an interdisciplinary
approach. Previously, she worked as a research scientist and college
professor.
Education
Dr.
Helmenstine holds a Ph.D. in biomedical sciences from the University of
Tennessee at Knoxville and a B.A. in physics and mathematics with a minor
in chemistry from Hastings College. In her doctoral work, Dr. Helmenstine
developed ultra-sensitive chemical detection and medical diagnostic tests.
Anne
Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D.
ThoughtCo
and Dotdash
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