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Gramequivalent

Gramequivalent, often written as gram-equivalent, is a classical chemistry concept used to express the reactive capacity of a substance in a chemical reaction. A gram-equivalent of a substance is the amount that will react with or supply one mole of a given reactive unit, such as one mole of hydrogen ions or one mole of electrons, in a specified reaction.

The gram equivalent weight (EW) is the mass, in grams, that corresponds to one equivalent. It is

Equivalents provide a link between mass and chemical reactivity. The number of equivalents in a mass m

See also: Normality, molar mass, valence, acid-base theory, redox chemistry.

calculated
as
the
molar
mass
(M)
divided
by
the
substance’s
reactive
valence
(n):
EW
=
M
/
n.
The
value
of
n
depends
on
the
reaction
context:
for
acid-base
reactions
it
is
related
to
the
number
of
replaceable
hydrogens
or
basic
equivalents,
and
for
redox
reactions
it
relates
to
the
number
of
electrons
transferred
per
formula
unit.
The
gram
equivalent
mass
thus
represents
the
amount
of
substance
needed
to
supply
one
equivalent
of
reactive
capacity.
is
given
by
equivalents
=
m
/
EW.
In
practice,
older
laboratory
work
frequently
used
equivalents
or
normality
(equivalents
per
liter)
in
titration
calculations.
Modern
practice
often
emphasizes
moles
and
molarity,
but
the
concept
of
equivalents
remains
useful
for
understanding
reactionsto
stoichiometry,
acid-base
behavior,
and
redox
processes.