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I'm writing a computer program to help a factory produce bottles of mixtures. A mixture is usually alcohol, water and some other stuff, like menthol. But could also be water and NaOH and some oils (think schampoo).

My basic understanding is that if one bottle is 500 ml and contains: 50% water 45% alcohol 5% oils I need: 250 ml water 225 ml alcohol 25 ml oils

Then if I want to make 1000 bottles I just multiply this with 1000: 250000 ml water 225000 ml alcohol 25000 ml oils

However this is with the assumption that all mixtures have linear dependencies.

So my questions is:

  1. Is all (possible) mixtures linear?
  2. Are all reactions linear?
  3. Are there a difference between mixtures and solutions here?

I suspect this is a very easy question for someone who know chemistry, but unfortunately my understanding is basic and my search skills too bad to find this out.

iveqy
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  • Not generally. A solution that behaves like that is called ideal. 2. Don't know what you mean, what reaction? 3. "Solution" is used to refer to a particular type of mixture, where one component provides a medium in which others (minor components) are dispersed. Official meaning of a solution in chemistry: http://goldbook.iupac.org/terms/view/S05746
  • – Buck Thorn Oct 13 '20 at 09:34
  • It depends on you somehow... As usual I would be in trouble preparing the above 50 45 5 mixture. Usually it should mean 50 45 5 all in grams, but diffused bad practice is always a source of confusion (indeed you were oriented to volumes...). This said, volumes are generally not additive but others have already answered/commented on that. – Alchimista Oct 13 '20 at 12:24