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Freezing Point Depression and Boiling Point Elevation03:12

Freezing Point Depression and Boiling Point Elevation

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Boiling Point Elevation
The boiling point of a liquid is the temperature at which its vapor pressure is equal to ambient atmospheric pressure. Since the vapor pressure of a solution is lowered due to the presence of nonvolatile solutes, it stands to reason that the solution’s boiling point will subsequently be increased. Vapor pressure increases with temperature, and so a solution will require a higher temperature than will pure solvent to achieve any given vapor pressure, including one...
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Phase Transitions: Melting and Freezing02:39

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Heating a crystalline solid increases the average energy of its atoms, molecules, or ions, and the solid gets hotter. At some point, the added energy becomes large enough to partially overcome the forces holding the molecules or ions of the solid in their fixed positions, and the solid begins the process of transitioning to the liquid state or melting. At this point, the temperature of the solid stops rising, despite the continual input of heat, and it remains constant until all of the solid is...
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Electrolytes: van't Hoff Factor03:08

Electrolytes: van't Hoff Factor

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Colligative Properties of Electrolytes
The colligative properties of a solution depend only on the number, not on the identity, of solute species dissolved. The concentration terms in the equations for various colligative properties (freezing point depression, boiling point elevation, osmotic pressure) pertain to all solute species present in the solution. Nonelectrolytes dissolve physically without dissociation or any other accompanying process. Each molecule that dissolves yields one...
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Effects of Temperature on Free Energy02:11

Effects of Temperature on Free Energy

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The spontaneity of a process depends upon the temperature of the system. Phase transitions, for example, will proceed spontaneously in one direction or the other depending upon the temperature of the substance in question. Likewise, some chemical reactions can also exhibit temperature-dependent spontaneities. To illustrate this concept, the equation relating free energy change to the enthalpy and entropy changes for the process is considered:
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Second Law of Thermodynamics02:49

Second Law of Thermodynamics

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In the quest to identify a property that may reliably predict the spontaneity of a process, a promising candidate has been identified: entropy. Processes that involve an increase in entropy of the system (ΔS > 0) are very often spontaneous; however, examples to the contrary are plentiful. By expanding consideration of entropy changes to include the surroundings, a significant conclusion regarding the relation between this property and spontaneity may be reached. In thermodynamic models, the...
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Responses to Heat and Cold Stress02:45

Responses to Heat and Cold Stress

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Every organism has an optimum temperature range within which healthy growth and physiological functioning can occur. At the ends of this range, there will be a minimum and maximum temperature that interrupt biological processes.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Feb 14, 2026

Rapid Freezing using Sandwich Freezing Device for Good Ultrastructural Preservation of Biological Specimens in Electron Microscopy
09:03

Rapid Freezing using Sandwich Freezing Device for Good Ultrastructural Preservation of Biological Specimens in Electron Microscopy

Published on: July 19, 2021

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[Festination and freezing]

H Imai1

  • 1Department of Neurology, Juntendo University School of Medicine.

Rinsho Shinkeigaku = Clinical Neurology
|December 1, 1993
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Akinesia, characterized by movement poverty and slowness, includes freezing. A distinct condition, potentially different from Parkinson's disease, shows promise with norepinephrine precursor therapy.

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Area of Science:

  • Neurology
  • Movement Disorders
  • Neuroscience

Context:

  • Akinesia, a core symptom of parkinsonism, encompasses poverty, slowness, and freezing of movement.
  • Festinating gait, characterized by accelerated, small-amplitude repetitive movements, was noted by Parkinson (1817).
  • Freezing represents a breakdown in voluntary movement, often linked to festination or sudden onset during gait initiation, turning, or navigating narrow spaces.

Purpose:

  • To describe a distinct akinesia/freezing condition unresponsive to L-DOPA.
  • To investigate the potential role of norepinephrine in freezing phenomena.
  • To discuss the nosological position and underlying pathology of this movement disorder.

Summary:

  • A condition presenting with pure akinesia or freezing, distinct from Parkinson's disease, has been identified.
  • This condition is unresponsive to L-DOPA, with normal cerebrospinal fluid HVA levels.
  • L-threo-DOPS, a norepinephrine precursor, showed mild-to-moderate efficacy in some freezing cases, supporting a norepinephrine-based hypothesis.

Impact:

  • Identifies a specific akinesia/freezing syndrome potentially differing from Parkinson's disease.
  • Suggests norepinephrine pathways as a therapeutic target for freezing of gait.
  • Highlights the need for further research into the pathological substrates and classification of these movement disorders.