and one boils at let's call it 175 degrees, one boils at 200 degrees. I assume those a both probably "evaporating" at room temperature up to their boiling temperatures? Maybe the higher the temp before their boiling point the faster their evaporation? I'm trying to figure out if I have those two combined in one solution, and I want to get them separated as much as possible, I would guess I would bring the temperature of the solution to 175 degrees exactly, and no more, and let all the 175 boiling point liquid boil out into something ready to catch the steam? I assume if I did that there would still be SOME of the 200 degree boiling point liquid that would have evaporated and caught with the steam of the 175 boiling degree liquid? If that is right, is there any way to eliminate that 100%?
Also, is there a name for a device where you can catch the steam that comes out and covert it to liquid? I would guess its like a glass hat over the beaker of boiling liquid that curves over into another beaker, and then that end of the glass hat tube that is above the new beaker is cooled. So the hot steam comes out of the boiling liquid, is caught in the glass hat, and then chills as it moves through the glass hat tube into the other beaker, falling as liquid into the other beaker. But that is just me making something up that I think would work LOL.
Thanks!!!
Also, is there a name for a device where you can catch the steam that comes out and covert it to liquid? I would guess its like a glass hat over the beaker of boiling liquid that curves over into another beaker, and then that end of the glass hat tube that is above the new beaker is cooled. So the hot steam comes out of the boiling liquid, is caught in the glass hat, and then chills as it moves through the glass hat tube into the other beaker, falling as liquid into the other beaker. But that is just me making something up that I think would work LOL.
Thanks!!!