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solvents

Solvents are substances, typically liquids, that dissolve solutes to form solutions. They are essential in chemistry, industry, and daily life because they enable reactions, facilitate extraction and purification, and adjust formulation properties. Solvents are broadly characterized by polarity, hydrogen-bonding ability, and volatility. They can be grouped into polar protic solvents (for example water, ethanol, methanol), polar aprotic solvents (such as acetone, dimethyl sulfoxide, acetonitrile, dimethylformamide), and nonpolar solvents (for example hexane, toluene, xylene). Physical properties including boiling point, dielectric constant, and solubility parameters influence solubility and reaction kinetics, and a solvent may dissolve many solutes only if their solubility parameters are similar.

Water is the most common solvent and is often referred to as the universal solvent. Many organic

Safety and environmental considerations are central to solvent use. Many solvents are flammable or volatile organic

solutes
are
soluble
in
polar
organic
solvents;
nonpolar
solutes
tend
to
be
soluble
in
nonpolar
solvents.
Common
industrial
solvents
include
acetone,
ethanol,
ethyl
acetate,
dichloromethane,
toluene,
xylene,
and
hexane,
as
well
as
nitriles
such
as
acetonitrile
and
amides
such
as
DMF
or
DMSO.
Solvents
are
chosen
to
maximize
solubility
while
considering
reactivity,
compatibility
with
materials,
toxicity,
flammability,
and
environmental
impact.
Some
solvents
also
influence
reaction
mechanisms
or
stabilize
charged
intermediates;
others
serve
primarily
as
media
for
dissolution
or
extraction.
compounds
that
contribute
to
air
pollution
and
water
contamination
if
mishandled.
Exposure
can
be
hazardous
to
health,
and
some
solvents
pose
long-term
risks.
Disposal
and
recovery
or
recycling
are
important
parts
of
responsible
solvent
use,
and
regulations
govern
labeling,
storage,
emissions,
and
waste
handling.
In
green
chemistry,
preference
is
often
given
to
safer,
readily
renewable,
or
recyclable
alternatives,
lower-toxicity
solvents,
and
solvent-free
or
solvent-minimized
processes.