What is an example of two liquids that are immiscible?

The terms miscible and immiscible are used in chemistry to describe mixtures.

Immiscibility is the property where two substances are not capable of combining to form a homogeneous mixture. The components are said to be "immiscible." In contrast, fluids that do mix together are called "miscible."

Components of an immiscible mixture will separate from each other. The less-dense fluid will rise to the top; the more-dense component will sink.

Oil and water are immiscible liquids. In contrast, alcohol and water are completely miscible. In any proportion, alcohol and water will mix to form a homogeneous solution.

This page looks at systems containing two immiscible liquids. Immiscible liquids are those which won't mix to give a single phase. Oil and water are examples of immiscible liquids - one floats on top of the other. It explains the background to steam distillation and looks at a simple way of carrying this out.

Obviously if you have two immiscible liquids in a closed flask and keep everything still, the vapor pressure you measure will simply be the vapor pressure of the one which is floating on top. There is no way that the bottom liquid can turn to vapor. The top one is sealing it in. For the purposes of the rest of this topic, we always assume that the mixture is being stirred or agitated in some way so that the two liquids are broken up into drops. At any one time there will be drops of both liquids on the surface. That means that both of them contribute to the overall vapor pressure of the mixture.

Assuming that the mixture is being agitated, then both of the liquids will be in equilibrium with their vapors. The total vapor pressure is then simply the sum of the individual vapor pressures:

\[\text{Total vapor pressure} = p_A^o + p_B^o\]

where \(p^o\) refers to the saturated vapor pressure of the pure liquid. Notice that this is independent of the amount of each sort of liquid present. All you need is enough of each so that both can exist in equilibrium with their vapor.

For example, phenylamine and water can be treated as if they were completely immiscible. (That isn't actually true, but they are near enough immiscible to be usable as an example.)

At 98°C, the saturated vapor pressures of the two pure liquids are:

phenylamine 7.07 kPa
water 94.30 kPa

The total vapor pressure of an agitated mixture would just be the sum of these - in other words, 101.37 kPa

Liquids boil when their vapor pressure becomes equal to the external pressure. Normal atmospheric pressure is 101.325 kPa. Compare that with the figure we have just got for the total vapor pressure of a mixture of water and phenylamine at 98°C. Its total vapor pressure is fractionally higher than the normal external pressure. This means that such a mixture would boil at a temperature just a shade less than 98°C - in other words lower than the boiling point of pure water (100°C) and much lower than the phenylamine (184°C).

Exactly the same sort of argument could be applied to any other mixture of immiscible liquids. I've chosen the phenylamine-water mixture just because I happen to have some figures for it!

Agitated mixtures of immiscible liquids will boil at a temperature lower than the boiling point of either of the pure liquids. Their combined vapor pressures are bound to reach the external pressure before the vapor pressure of either of the individual components get there.

Notice that in the presence of water, phenylamine (or any other liquid which is immiscible with water) boils well below its normal boiling point. This has an important advantage in separating molecules like this from mixtures. Normal distillation of these liquids would need quite high temperatures. On the whole these tend to be big molecules we are talking about. Quite a lot of molecules of this sort will be broken up by heating at high temperatures. Distilling them in the presence of water avoids this by keeping the temperature low. That's what steam distillation achieves.

We will carry on with the phenylamine example for now. During the preparation of phenylamine it is produced as a part of a mixture containing a solution of all sorts of inorganic compounds. It is removed from this by steam distillation.

Steam is blown through the mixture and the water and phenylamine turn to vapor. This vapor can be condensed and collected.

What is an example of two liquids that are immiscible?

The steam can be generated by heating water in another flask (or something similar). As the hot steam passes through the mixture it condenses, releasing heat. This will be enough to boil the mixture of water and phenylamine at 98°C provided the volume of the mixture isn't too great. For large volumes, it is better to heat the flask as well to avoid having to condense too much steam and increase the volume of liquid in the flask too much.

The condensed vapor will consist of both water and phenylamine. If these were truly immiscible, they would form two layers which could be separated using a separating funnel. In fact, the phenylamine has a slight solubility in water and various other techniques have to be used in this particular case to get the maximum yield of phenylamine. These aren't relevant to this topic.

Steam distillation can be used to extract some natural products - for example, to extract eucalyptus oil from eucalyptus, citrus oils from lemon or orange peel, and to extract oils used in perfumes from various plant materials.

Contributors and Attributions

  • Jim Clark (Chemguide.co.uk)

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What is an example of two liquids that are immiscible?

Updated April 27, 2018

By John Brennan

Some liquids mix readily like perfect partners. Alcoholic beverages like whiskey, wine and beer, for example, are all mixtures of water and alcohol. Other liquids don't mix at all. If you shake a bottle full of oil and water, for instance, you can get them to mix but as soon as you return the bottle to the shelf, the two will separate. Liquids that don't mix and stay mixed are said to be immiscible.

Like dissolves like is a simple rule of thumb chemists use when evaluating how soluble a compound will probably be in a given solvent, and the same rule holds true for determining whether two liquids are miscible. The rule has to do with how atoms share electrons. Oxygen and nitrogen are much more selfish than carbon or hydrogen, so molecules that contain oxygen or nitrogen bonded to carbon or hydrogen feature regions where electrons are shared unevenly; this part of the molecule is said to be polar. Regions made predominantly of carbon and hydrogen, by contrast, are nonpolar because electrons here are shared more equally. A nitrogen or oxygen atom with a hydrogen atom attached to it is so polar it can form weak bonds called hydrogen bonds with oxygen or nitrogen atoms on other molecules.

Like dissolves like says that liquids will probably mix well if they have similar polarity and hydrogen-bonding ability. The more similar they are in terms of these two characteristics, the more likely it is they will mix well. Liquids that differ significantly in terms of these characteristics, by contrast, are likely to be immiscible.

Just as you'd expect from the like-dissolves-like principle, water and hydrocarbon-based solvents tend to be completely immiscible. Common examples include hexane (C6H14), toluene (C7H8) and cyclohexane (C6H12). Gasoline is a mixture of hydrocarbon solvents like hexane, which is why gasoline and water don't mix. Toluene is a common solvent in paint thinners and other industrial chemicals, and these typically mix poorly with water as well.

Perhaps the most common example of immiscible liquids is oil and water. Vegetable oils are made from fats; these do contain oxygen atoms as part of a so-called ester group, but the oxygen atoms do not have hydrogens attached to them; so while these oxygen atoms can accept hydrogen bonds, they do not have a hydrogen they can use to form a hydrogen bond with another molecule. Also the vast majority of the fat molecule is hydrocarbon, so most of the molecule is nonpolar. That's why fat molecules tend to mix very poorly with water.

Just like water, other highly polar solvents tend to be immiscible with pure hydrocarbon solvents. Hexane, for example, will not mix with highly polar methanol (CH3OH) or glacial acetic acid (C2H4O2) because it has no ability to form hydrogen bonds with these molecules and is too nonpolar. Dimethyl sulfoxide is another polar solvent that mixes well with water but will not mix with hexane or cyclohexane and other common hydrocarbon solvents.