Molar concentration, also known as molarity, is defined as the number of moles of a solute present in 1 liter of solution. It is expressed as:
\(M = \frac{\text{moles of solute}}{\text{volume of solution (L)}}\)
This concept is critical in stoichiometric calculations and solution preparation. Other related terms include:
Activity: Effective concentration of a species in a solution.
Normal solution: Concentration expressed in equivalents per liter.
Active mass: An older term used in reaction rate expressions.
| List-I (System) | List-II (Axial lengths and angles) |
|---|---|
| (A) Cubic | (I) \(a = b = c, \alpha = \beta = \gamma = 90^\circ\) |
| (B) Tetragonal | (II) \(a = b \neq c, \alpha = \beta = \gamma = 90^\circ\) |
| (C) Orthorhombic | (III) \(a \neq b \neq c, \alpha = \beta = \gamma = 90^\circ\) |
| (D) Hexagonal | (IV) \(a = b \neq c, \alpha = \beta = 90^\circ, \gamma = 120^\circ\) |