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methanol and isopropanol

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rhyeal:
is there any case where methanol and isopropanol would bond to raise/lower the boiling point of each other?  we are doing a sludge project and the data we have is close to either, save the boiling point which is 79C.  this is closer to isopropanol, but the time/temp data we have suggests that there is a plateau at 75C and again at 79C.  the way we see it is either of these could be isopropanol or methanol.  any help would be great as this project is due tomorrow and we only discovered the apparent Liquid C plateau today.

Thanks,
Rhyeal

Donaldson Tan:
I don't have any data for you, but I do have some theory.

Check out Raoult's Law.

Note both methanol and isopropanol contributes to the vapour pressure (being volatile), their residual proportion to each other will decide the boiling point for the mixture.

Mitch:
Can you take any spectral data? Like an NMR or maybe look at the firgerprint in IR?

hmx9123:
Another good way to test is just to smell the sample.  If it smells like rubbing alcohol, it's i-PrOH.  If it's got more of a sweetish odor, it's MeOH.

jdurg:
Is it possible for the methanol and isopropanol to maybe form an azeotrope?  (I don't recall ever hearing of an MeOH and Isopropanol azeotrope, but organic was never my strong field).  :P

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