Dissolve vs. Disperse: Key Differences Explained
Definitions
- Dissolve: A solute (solid, liquid, or gas) breaks into individual molecules or ions and becomes uniformly mixed at the molecular level with a solvent, forming a true solution.
- Disperse: Particles (solid or liquid) are distributed throughout another medium but remain as distinct particles or droplets, forming a suspension or colloid rather than a true molecular solution.
Mechanism
- Dissolve: Intermolecular forces (ionic, polar, hydrogen bonding) between solute and solvent overcome solute–solute attractions; solute particles separate into individual species.
- Disperse: Mechanical or stabilizing forces (stirring, surfactants, Brownian motion) keep particles suspended; particles do not separate into individual molecules.
Particle size and appearance
- Dissolve: Particle size at molecular/ionic scale (<1 nm); solution is clear and homogeneous.
- Disperse: Particle size ranges from ~1 nm to >1 μm (colloids) or larger (suspensions); mixture can be cloudy, opaque, or show Tyndall effect.
Stability
- Dissolve: Thermodynamically stable (given no chemical change); solute won’t settle out.
- Disperse: Often metastable; particles may settle, aggregate, or separate over time unless stabilized.
Examples
- Dissolve: Table salt in water, sugar in tea, ethanol in water.
- Disperse: Oil droplets in water (emulsion), paint pigments in water, sand in water (suspension), milk (colloid).
How to tell them apart (practical tests)
- Visual clarity: Clear = likely dissolved; cloudy = likely dispersed.
- Tyndall effect: Shine a light—scattering indicates dispersed particles (colloid), no scattering indicates true solution.
- Filtration: True solutions pass through fine filters; suspensions can be filtered.
- Settling: Dispersed particles may settle over time; dissolved solute will not.
Applications and relevance
- Dissolution is critical in pharmaceuticals (drug bioavailability), chemical reactions, and lab titrations.
- Dispersion is important in formulations (paints, emulsions, foods), wastewater treatment, and materials science.
Summary (one-line)
Dissolve = solute becomes molecularly mixed with solvent (true solution); Disperse = particles remain separate and suspended (colloid/suspension).
Leave a Reply