Why does atmospheric pressure not affect SVP?

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Roshan Patel
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I'm an anaesthetist... I have exams coming up... I use lots of gases and vapours and need to appreciate the associated physics.

My question relates to saturated vapour pressure and ambient pressure...

SVP increases with temperature - more molecules have sufficient energy to escape the surface/increased temp increases rate of endothermic reactions.


When a substance is below its SVP it behaves more or less as an ideal gas such that reducing volume/increasing pressure increases the partial pressure of the vapour within the mixture in accordance to Dalton's law.

What I do not understand is why at SVP pressure has no effect. I have seen this time and again but no explanation is given..

I would kindly appreciate clarification on this.

Thanks
 
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Hi Chet,

Thanks for your response.

I think I get it - at SVP any further increase in pressure will cause liquification of some of the gaseous phase but the vapour remains saturated. This ambient pressure has no effect...

Thanks again...

I forgot how cool physics is - once you get it, it's a great feeling..