Jownal of Mokcdar Liquids, 49 (1991) 209-223 Elmwier Science Publishers B-V., Amsterdam
Volmuetric c7_ Onori,
properties A_ Snntmcci
lXpart.imento
209
of aqueous
alkali
halides
and
ionic
hydration
amI F. Mnrchso~ti
di FisicR,
UCvmsi
t.A fli Perllgia
I-OG100 PmIlgiz3 (It+) (Received
12 February
1991)
Abstract
1. INTRODUCTION The lx-fqxt.im
of d?lect.rolytc?s in aq~~~fms sollltions H owevcr,
H~WW af mricnce [l]_ Llie niolecrdr~r The
imt.lim
of
iiitmermAifm of ions with
Ir~drdiorr
ihdf,
they
niinil~ers
vary
prmessm
since
availaldle
to inclividiml with
of
wntm
th
is not. coiiipl~tdy
in m;n~y fdd-IiCt.11re~
rii~flerstm~fl_
flcscril~cfl iii t.m-mFi01 ion hydralion, ions
in the literat.iire,
as A nicamirc
121. The
at. mm time
as well
are lmsecl on different.
of t.lie ii~iiiil~cr of VEL~IIPSof the
wd.imat.ed
m the definit.ion
pictmrm
and
of the
of liydrzhon
underlying
moleciil,2l-
[2,3] _
The
di.srdution
of an electrolyte
solvent. and a &cream I.IIC water
nmlccdes_
hydrathn
mechnisnl.
h-ml conq~re~ihi1it.y afmune
int.cmct.ions
watt?r is ohm
intzmtct
thy
to the sc~arcc? knowledge
ion-wnt.cr
numnimx m-f+ afGgnec1
waker mdecules l~yclrathn
due
the
arc ol importmlc~
The
magnitude
Many &h.
Their
msnmpthm
is negligild~
[2,4].
has neither
0167-7822/91/$03&9
6
h-id,
apr)roacL
in fact, may vmy
of the ionic: rmlide M m-c rmxmt,ly,
tl~coretid
1991 -
cf~usm R volume
dile tm iiiterat&mr;
of t.hesie changes
m~thors
that0 the coniprehl~i1it.y
nmlecules
in water
of it.s conipremildit.y,
it, hm
nor experimental
contrmticn
lsehveen
CAII be IW& t.0 extrmd
from
to qlmntify
hydrat.ion
OII~ mother,
lmt
mid the mlevmlto llydndefl hen
pinLed
jnr;t.ificathn
of the
the ions mid
out
the
ntuidsem t.lley dl water
tlmt fmdi ali
[5,6].
Elmvier Science Publishers B.V. All rights maewed
210
The
volnme
contmctinn,
too, 11ns hen
of the hydmtioii
inecl~anisni.
largely
the relevant
unknown,
Aotit
the effective
voltmie
eZect~n.~i~icfiorr [2,7].
However,
propphies
Most
of the salvatd
Therefore,
of the me~urements
rc.~tdts ohtainerl law_
I.0 the tcnlperat.ure [S-11] pilldished aqueous mnge.
electrolyte
in the hydratinn idependent..
water
per mole
of salt,
with
is a rlecre~ing
the i&9,
EXPE~NTAL Ultrasonic
contml
Tbe velocity fdutions
developed
velocities
intemctionw,
within
reprodticilde
d.ial~atic
inft~rniation tempcmtiire
intemctinns is ftirly
existing
tenipemhure
to estimate
the values
of water
and sdt. concentmtions.
of
0f
vohne,
in liydmtion In particular,
function
of salt concentration.
by Gurney
This
1121, of 43.11increz4ing
result.
overlap
of
wi t.li the sd t concent.mt.ion.
emphyed
Nnaonic
Corporation
less tlizui O.lOC with ahdate
compre=ihili
~llrl the density
with standard
of papers
the ionic intrinsic
the density
and
conipr~ud~i1it.y
in a suitaIde
we succeeded and
mnge
tlint important
wah=
and the
the Debye-Hiidd
Iii a series
the diahtic
were tiied3sured by means
AvRilalde from
7I, were
from
concentmtions
quanti th4_ shown
conditions
SET-UP
wr3s accnmte
velocity,
for
nunil~er, defined as the niinil~er of iiiole~s of hydmtion
wxt.er layers (or shells)
velocimeter
ion-water
wi tli tenipemti~re
that the hydmtioti
have been performed
a5 an effect of strong
ni1nil~en3, the conipreAl~i1it.y
is consistent hydrated
of the involved
ly
the
of devidions
to the intermediate
the l~asis of our analysis czitsed
ty and
regzhding
in isothennnl
the conipressil~~ility of hyt‘lmtion
shells and their vtiat~ion we showed
in tenus
paid
we ;IRsnmed that,
contraction
the liyrlmtion
hypotheses
soli~tiont3 KS a fimct,ion of tempemtiire
shell,
On
t,he volume
za < 0.01)
can he inferred hy nie~tlring
In this contest
is
of the sfllvent
l~ot.11 the compressildi
in the litemtnre
over the pact. few years we hve
t-111the ion liydmtioii
2,
discussed
dependence
water
n~mnptions
sphere_
molar fmctinn
JU-~ often
of the l~ydmtion
the magnitiide
to interpret
investigstion
lmrler various
we need additional
reported
Lit.tle zd.t.ention has hen
the state extracted
ions and
in order
of the Iiyclmtinn
very dilute soliit.ions (sdt
since
data have hen
r1ensit.y data iii terms of ion liydmtion, pliysicd
used in the experin~ental
in the our experiments
accuracy
p, through
ring-arotiiid
The
tempemtnre of the soiind
of fO.17n -9-l_ fmrn
the values
the relation
were prepared
the pre=nt
6080).
the nie~nrements
ty j3 was c.Ictdat,erl
of the solution,
purity_ Thronghold
and
of a coniniercial
(mod.
of the sound
/3 =
by weighting
report water is denoted
l/u’p.
The
compoimrls
as component
211
3. TEMl?EFLA?lXJlXE COMPRESSIBILITY
DEPENDENCE
Here I?1 and i&, c1cnot.e t.h hyd
rrr;pect.ively, wliererrs x1
volume 1%
t.h
molar
tBlieprcfmire
AND
of’ one mole: of free water aml of l~ydrated
On t.aking the derivat.ivr! ol q.(l) enkropy, and neglecting
OF DENSITY
fraction
salt,
of water in the liyclrat,ion region.
wit.11 rcspcct. t-0 th presfmr~ p, at. constmit, , one cd~tains the following clcpenclcnce of x1hard
r&&on
w of dir? climmlved milt. Fhm
6x-p. (1) mC1 (3) it. fdlows
inm~ediakly
6-4
212 am1
(7) where
-
-063 -080
Figure
1. @(cm5
dyne-t moi-t) vs
T (“C) for NaCl
acqueous
different v8h~s
of x2.
Table
SoWions
Figure 2.4pp (cm3 mat-1) vs P,v, 8t
(cm5 dyne-t mol-t) solutions with different %wf
concentrations.
1.
Parameters of the hydration spheres (at 2YC)
as a function of the Pauling ionic
radius.
Salt -~ LiCI
Rclauon
Ranion
A
A
%
lot’P*h
Q
to’?&
Cl
cmaync-’
cm3ffloI-1
cmldyne-*
czr&rt~l-~
0.60
1.81
17.7
3.58
17.83
-3.1
22.24
NaCl
0.95
1.81
21.0
3.49
17.76
-3.3
24.26
KCL
1.33
1.81
18.9
3.52
17.73
-1.4
34.43
CkCl
1.69
1.81
18.0
3-60
17.77
-0.5
45.95
NaBr
0.95
1.95
20.5
3.55
17.75
-1.2
31.08
Lit
0.60
2.16
18.7
3.74
17.94
1.2
Nd
0.9s
2.16
22.3
3.71
17.8 I
0
42.47
KI
x.33
2.16
13.8
3.8t
17.80
0
51,44-
38.46
214 1,) figure 2 shows (5,3O”C)
sotutinns
for N&t
pressildity satiition
This
the quantity
~JB as a function ranging
according
we expect
can
t.emperdure
range con~irtered.
increases
further
a minimum
he neglected
from q.(7)
65°C.
That
alkali hdides
has heen points
for the atkdi
hydrated
by tinesu- fitting Gurney’~
a &creMe
examined
at various 3)
(fig.
proposed
by Gurney
wa t.eX layem increases hydrat,ion nmnber
the data in figure
mdel,
i8 the
the enhanced
of the qilailtit.y I&_
VOtlllllf? OcCIitk't
by
temperature
salt molar with
eq.(ll)
with respect
of S, we ohfain
the equat.ion
[12], according
~Vt~m?
fllj, mwt
ioli volume, flhvh
7~3 s
prodilced
fl2h JUe
respedvety. red.
on
th?
=
khhh,
straight
tilles (fig.4).
by eq_ (12) with fj2hVzh aid
3. spheres
wouIrl
i~li
-
s
(11)
Of Fiatt in the
fXdllkkIi
exctlldillg
region_
the pressure dependence
w Water
it. wa
mid
fomirl that
experimentd
independent
the
Differ-
,&vl,,
studied The
t.he
for zero salt,
Vlh
IllOte
/&hVlh
The This
to whidl
So ext.rapotabed
of the tlydratiOll
COlq~rCSitdi~
In at1 the cse,r,
~2. X2.
concentration.
overlap of the hydration
-i-
By
have been
fractions
wi t.h the fdt
to the pressure and neglecting
fihv,
range_
increAsing
Iii fact, Vh can l,e exprP*ed
One
exhibits
of @p for some
hydrat.ion shell and VI,, is the molar vohm~e of water in the hydration entiating
of
N 0.11 in the
of S and ljhvh
decrease
-
V2h
comof the
dependence
[Afllvl
investigation
our
the values
v, = V2h + s Where
of &VI
to t.he (5,30°C)
e+(7),
oldained
In tatde 1 we also report t.he limiting
determine
apparent
fact. that. the water compressit~itity
limited
with the model
inmlt~er of overlapping
Fbllowing
molar
t.he tempemture
might he no longer t.he case FLSt-he temperature
with
halides
IjrhVh thus
result is consixt.cnt
concentration
lud
the temperature
to that
Bertring this in mind,
t.he experimentnl of S and
when
with respect
c11le to the welt-known
at. aronnd
determined vatliss
u~t_ The
interval
to the linear law
is the hehaviour
aqueous
from 4 to 18%
in the temperatlrre
‘98 tnrnx ant to ctepslld on t;he concent.ration
S and ljhv,
fitting
of fllvl
vatnes
the
tlyctKih?d
the values are closely
of re-
of die salt, concentration.
216
S
S
22 20 18 16
_
i
Nal
14
NaBr ~. NaCl
0
0.04 X2
0.02
_c;E,-
l
10
.
-
1
.
.
0.06
_
.
_
.
0.08
-
KCI
12
14
16
S
18
20
22
21% Fitting
of oar data for cJn& according
and slopes
coIlectd
in tdde
to eq_(12),
1. Expression
(11)
yidds
the v&us
for the int.ercepts
for vj, cond-hd
with
e+(G)
ImcIs
[7j, in terms
of the
to
Here,
the ionic
apparent
mlhtract.ed
ionic
ion-solvent
interaction
Figure The
eq_(13)
with
temperature. sidts.
The
NaCl tml-es.
I”““““’
20-
16-
vohne
vg,,
points
Fllld
(V,
Andogom valae~
is expressed,
as nmd
dlowmulce for the vdmne
contraction
amset
by
(e~ectmtriclion)_ soInt.iona as a fnnct~ion of S at 10,20,25
are closely
the ruune intercept
the expe_rinienta.l Fignre
molar
to make
5 slmws @v for N&I
experimentd
s1t-q~~ and
volume
-
on the GV
1~eImviom-s have - vlh)
&I ta wit.Ji eq.(13)
soI~d.ions at, different.
axis.
independent0
i&h)
of vzr, and (VI
5. @V (nn3moZ-‘)
fit.terl by straight,
VR S for t.empera-
heen
Such A hehvior of X2, And vph ol~erved
f or smne dkdi
are &o
lines with
reported
and 3OOC.
slight.Iy
different
ifi predict.ecl
i~ldep?lid#?Ii~
Of
by the
for so11h-n~~ of different. Imlide~
in talde
1.
obtained
by fitding
217
On the h&s contraction drati&
af our analysis
nilmher,
their vrrridona all ddoricles
and iodide
and dear&y
investigated
volume,
of w;rtPx in hydrAian
show a consistent
now a few important
l),
It f&odd
pttern
the hy-
shells zxncl
he noticed
thlit
for the above qimnti-
with the only exception
of lithium
remarks:
for So are close to, hot. higher
immlxx-.
iiidic~txs
of the volmne
vdiiefi
to hehave ~~~omdody.
1) the vahies obtained coordination
the
the ionic intrinsic
And Ralt concentrations_
of the crrtionic racliils (tdde
halides which app,ex We m&e
interactian,
the comprtibili~y with temperature
t.ief-i as a fimction
imml~er
we lxsve tlmfz efdimated
CXLWXXIhy the ion-water
Iii this reqlect.,
it dioitld
the mimnl,er of wat.er molecdes
than the corresponding
he noted &redly
that
t.0t.d
the coordination
hoiincl to a.n electxolyte
ion, while, in oiu case, So accxnint.fi for all of the water moleciilcsR whose &xsity compressihi1it.y 2) otu values water
sue dfect.ed
advocded
by the presence of the ion ill];
for (31h are not. negligilde
at 25°C
is 4.477
and
10-11c7r~2
by several aiithors
wit.11 refqect,
dune-’
)_
This
to fl1 (the
result
that the compressibility
compresil~ility
disproves
of
the xxnmption
of water in primary
hydrat.ion
is zero; 3) mruly investigrrtorsi tried t.0 e5timd.e water elect.rostriction l?l - Vlh do indirsta, I.llti
any Itwddde
4) our vdnes with
volume s&on,
[7]_
in whidl
with
In fact,
Va, smrl the cxtioii,
(L=
t.lie difference for anions
fimdler
and
1.46 f
0.02 This
inchiding
space
is related
in agreement,
aroiinrl
not. only
the. crptd
the ion.
t.0 tlie cry&d
ionic
ionic
Such 8 vollune vohime
of the
V, by the linear fitdrip: Izxw (fig_ G)
am-l
c =
yidcls the anionic and cationic
1.8 f
11.2, sepratdy.
lset,ween ion cavit.y and crystal
[19,20]_
ionic voliinies
V2h c~ii he clefincd as t.lir: vczliime of the
for the dcd
the ionic radiiis
The her=&fit. of our data with cq_(l4) fraction
clrtt.zbfor
hiit, nre significxmtly
cnntrxtion,
the ion is coiit.ained,
hiit x&o A correction
increxscs
R vdnmr:
diie to
ef3timnt.e;
predictions
czviby
contrxtion
of hypot.hefzes [73_ 0 ur experimental
II ninnlxr
TtRexptxted,
the volimle
for Vzh xue gresder than the relevant, cry&d
previons
qdierirxd
mxler
t.lie0retidly
intrinsic volnme
It. liafa been pointed
oiit. that
ionic rxGliiis is greater for czt.ioilF; tllAl1
rctnark is conrristent. with onr redts,
being
c larger t.han CL
4.
CONCENTRA’I’ION
DEPENDENCE
OF
DENSITY
AND
coMPFuzssII3ILrrY The
knowledge
pressi1dit.y information that
of the ternperat.111~ dependence
of dectrdyte makes br
acmunt.
Lhe solut.ion.
sohttions
a conpirison
the effect
Fbcently
z&t+
possible
with die predictions
of concent.rat.ion
on the
[13] we t.ried to cletemline
throngh a ainqde model
based on Gurney’s
their increasing
wit.11 salt, cmicentration.
overlap
It was assiimd conlpasses
wit.11 density
11yclration shell of a cat.ion ant1 an anion, belong
toyof cn-sphere
ta different. c~spheres
the con1-
of molecular
cpant~it.atively
at. the center
inorlels
respe1:tiveIy,
at. the sanle tbne.
of
silch a dependence
of a co-sphere
and coniprf?siI~ility
to overlap,
New
clmisity and comprezd~ility
shells and
which en-
essent.idly
dilFere11t
and SC clcnote the mnnl~er of water ~nolecd~s
lronl those of the h11lk_ Let. S$ nccount.ed for the posrddi
and
~nechanism_
idea 1121 of wat.er coor&nat.ion
t.hat esrch ion is plural
all water molecules
of the density
light on the hydration
with So =
So+ + S;.
in the It, was
too, since a water niolec11le inny As a
co~~scc~~le~~cc,
hyclrat.inn
the
1111nll~erS is hllidler
than So ancl te1irli=it.0 So for vanifihi11gly x1nall vall1es of t.he .sdt.
concent.r&on.
clependence
The
of the overlap
Llle fdt, concent~r~t.ion is expct.cclly fdidi a dependence On adding
111echanisn1 and,
very coinplic~tcfl.
iincler sonif? sinqdifying
of S on
We cM.in1nterl q11ant.it31tsively
11ypothes~_
fZ7rz nlolcs of FULLY. t.cra I;olut.ion containing
al which sit in Lhe frm wder
therefore,
7~1 molts
free of water (7~~
region) and 712 moles of salt., 1,ot.h water 1iiolt3-3~1~ aid
ions (niost.ly wit.h 0pposit.e i+p)
tna_v happen
to lie in t.hc co-siph&-e of the .aclclerlions_
On neglect.ing the lat.t.er effect in view cJf the i1iccpdit.y 712 < 7~1, a fraczt.ion of the SIJrlr2.2mole5 of water nlol~~hs fcJnni11g 1.1~ co-sphcrcs of Lllc ~1712 n&let1 sdt. n1olcs (*onle from t.he free water region, 011 assi1niiii~
that
free mid
while t.hr?rciiininrler conlcs Cm111t.lic hydrat.ion
hatit1cl wat.er nic~lm:~~lr,s
moles of nrldecl salt. wit.11 equal pr~JlJaldit._v, if. follows
eiiI.cr t.11e co-fqdicres t.lJ;rt,
fret = -11.1 /rcc --d7r. so cl7r:! 711
one_
of die rl71.2
Table 2,
for the calculation solutions from eq_(18).
Parameters
of the compressibility
of aqueous NaCl
1ol’P,ylh
101lpai?m
cm5 dyne-1 ~1-1
cx-& dyne-’
%l
10
17.ofo.6
56Itl
-65zt8
15
17.3fo.9
57It2
-70&l 0
20
16.5fo.7
56&l
-633
25
15.8~.6
55fl
-55f8
30
16.1zI10.7
56kl
-59&S
mol-1
Table 3_ Parameters for the calculation of the mean molar volume of some aqueous alkali halide solutions from eq_(17)_
L
Salt
cm3
SO mol-*
SD”
Ref.
wm --
Licl
25
17_909ztO_OO8
21.68zto.08
24.8ko.9
7
23
l-cl
20
17_892-+0.002
21.6ofo.01
26.2M.4
20
22
NaCl
20
17.69ztO.01
24.07M.09
19.2*0_5
25
22
Nail
5
17.68M.0
22.9&o. 1
24.7zt0.6
10
23
NaCl
25
17.8ktO.02
23.41tO.2
23fl
10
23
NaCl
15
17.64fo.01
24.lfo.l
19.3ztO.4
15
24
NaCl
30
17.84ztO.01
23.5A0.1
22.8f0.9
10
24
KC1
25
17.87&0.01
33_3fo.
28fl
7
23
KCl
20
17_82+0_01
33.3&O. 1
27&l
25
22
CsCl
20
17.73fo.02
46Sfo.
2x1
250
22
NaBr
20
17_767fo.O07
19.52kO.06
20.4fo.4
25
22
KBr
23
17.77fo.02
4o.tktO. 1
21fl
60
22
a fit standard
deviation
1
1 1
-71’ 0
’ ’ ’ ’ 1 ’ 1 ’ 1 0.02 o.cN3 0.08 0.04 0.1 %
Figure 7. Maxn nm1a.r volura~~ v and resihals Av (cnr%u~Z-~) 7~13 N&l molar fraction ~:a_ Experimenhl data from ref. 24 (dolx) are fitted (solid line) by memls of eq.(1‘7). Av is the difference hetweem experimedxd data am1 theoretical prediction.
loo
’
I
=
I
m
,
’
,
loo-
-
I
,
,
-
--
*
1
m
*0
1
0.02
.
”
0.04
11 0.06
1
0.08
n
/W and resichmh A@
Expes-imental data from ref.
(cn~~rl?/r~e-~
-mO
7nfLl)
21 (clots) are fittd
is the clifferenm between experinmhd
1
.
0.02
I
I
0.04
x2
Figure 8.
,
-
f - I
0.1
I
.
+o- - . .
55’
,
o_-
:
z=
A/3v
I
.
50: I)
I
71s
N&l
I
*
. I,
0.06 x2
I
0.08
m-
0.1
molar fraction 3;~.
(solid line) lsy meam of eq.(lS).
data and theoretical prediiction.
Beiug
x1
fret
*yd, on tmhstitnting
=21-x:1
IIRe of eqrx(ll)
and (12),
/w=xl
we 0lkGn
eq_(lG)
e
Eqna tions (17)
into eqs_(l),
the following
fllh&h
+x1
and (l&) give the concentration respectively,
of a fdt
can he ;serl
to evalurrte
These SO, Vlh, &,,&,V&,
equations
We have verified
that eqQl7)
ad
volved parametelw 3 within
&h&h
sodium
the experimental
chloride
The
dependence
with
Of *Pg (tde
crystd
and c the
1.36 f
5.
fit
of the parameters
of the experimenti
with those ohtinecl
or difference
so, &h,
mle
i&,
&la
of section
dts
up to the
the remilk of mud1
[21] properties
between
The
&h,&$h
VFdli~
of the anion,
for v&
0.01
data.
with redifd.ic values of the in-
and compre.ssil~ility
clistrilmted.
thoRe ol>t.Gned
ionic volmne tile data
wd
of the meml molar
of qiieous
the exp~ximental
stxu-darcl deviation
and
is dwrrys
of the measuremenk
1).
e!cl_(14)_ Fitting wlhe
sqima
(18)
at fixed temperrrtm-e and
for a nnml~er of uni-univdent
randomly
of the pRlXmetelX
agreement
fi2h%h
the values
implemented
The residual,
appear
Vdllt?fi
solution
[13-151 and conipressil~ili~.y
wi & the accm-aq
good
Pading
solntinns.
vdnes,
conqxxrahle
fairly
xcnracy
+ t2h
In talde 2 and figures 7 and 8 we display
of the vohimetric
calculated
a kad
113,211, rep ro d iice the density
sat.m-at.ion concentration. an andysis
~hmllgh
end (18),
for P, Illlcl jY3
dependence
\*olunie and comprefiddity, p-f2SSlWC?.
(2) ELU~(8) and making
expressions
in section
the andysis
2) me ill
(t.ddft
of the temperdure
foiind here are liliW%rly rdatd Va, and of the czdkm,
reported
and 2.2 f
Itlld /&f,v'h
from
in tdde
v=, according
2 with thrrt equation
O-2, respectively,
w1lid1
to the
yields
c0111pare
to
for n
I-f!i%SOllddJ'
3.
CONCLUSIONS The
present
compresfddity
repor?
and density
dboiil. the struct~ixd The
ansdysk
118 to neglect flail
of electrolyte
interactions
the temperature temperzdme
soliitions
occurring
of the compresddity
in it sntitable
adequate
showR thrrt FTsimnkzmeons
data
depend6mce
xniong
provirks
of S and /?hv,
dependence
of both
interesting
the Rolnte and solvent
;t~ a function
range (5,30°C).
to rn~s=sure the temperdnre
investigation
of the with
aclial~atic
inform&on moleciiles.
temperature respect
AR FLconsequence,
to that
we think
of fl Itt 22 fixed rather
lesds of
more
than the
222 isothermal
dependence
the a..umpt.ion
j~~stdicxl than not.dJly,
the
corresponcling
fur the alkali
ldicles
llydrat.ion
mnnlm-,
The
hyyrhtion
ccntration. lmsed
af fl on XZ_ Tn our
This
intq~rr?tation
scht.ionx
yields
nmnlmr
salt. concentration.
Siidi
a niorlel
is meant
t.mly te solutiom
on the concentration. of
s&d
due tm th
approximath~ the main The
the cation
ion-ion
tliiis
long-range
Codo11~1~ forces,
impact. on the
volinnetric:
their
and
function
here,
of the salt conovdap
ilttenipt
nwdwmism
at t.he basis
niodel
of alkali
Moreover,
lea&
of the D&ye-Hiickel
pmpe!rt.ies of eltlectrolyte
acqueous
between pssilde
sat.isfacztorily
aqueous
IIR to co1~11de
of dec-
of the criide
rq~rodnces
halides
the
at singling
have heen negl:lectecl, t,oo. In spite that. om
nu~dc?l
with
that. no rlist~inction made.
the
nmmiing
and conil~resd~ility
IUW heen
data
like
of a simple
increasing rough
h4nst
density
pmuneters,
by mans
to 1~ a f&t
properties
arc lxttcr
intni tive pliysid
of the density
WC hiincl
hydration
and
the anion
intcracrtionfi vchmetric
~UCC~B of Gurney’s
Leir
We remark
mid
intrducccl,
experimental
with
sphermi
the &pndcnce
hydralion
watm
for the rdevant
ha. lmen intcrpreterl
of liyclr~ticm
amunlptions
in the literature.
hums out. to he FLdlecrewing resltlt
governing
hove
of tlille comlwmsil~ilit.y
mtimate~
which arc nmre consistent
on dir: existmim
th
/&, = 0 conn1~1n1y advocated
remarkalh
orit, the fmtom
opinion,
solutions_
that the ion-ion
theory,
have a minor
solritinns_
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