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๐Ÿงช Formulations

Spec 5.8.1.2 ๐Ÿ“™ Higher
๐Ÿ“– In-Depth Theory

What is a Formulation?

A FORMULATION is a MIXTURE that has been carefully designed so that it has the right properties for a specific purpose.
Each component in a formulation is present in a SPECIFIC, MEASURED AMOUNT โ€” because the proportions matter for the formulation to work correctly.
Key distinction:
A random mixture of chemicals is NOT a formulation.
A FORMULATION is a deliberately designed, optimised mixture.
Examples of formulations:
MEDICINES (tablets, creams): active ingredient + binders + fillers + coatings + preservatives.
PAINTS: pigment + solvent + binder + additives (anti-mould, drying accelerants).
FUELS: blend of hydrocarbons + additives (anti-knock agents, stabilisers).
ALLOYS: specific proportions of metals for required properties.
FERTILISERS: specific ratios of NPK (nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium).
FOOD: specific recipes with controlled proportions.
CLEANING PRODUCTS: detergents + surfactants + enzymes + fragrance.
COSMETICS: emollients + emulsifiers + active ingredients + fragrances.

Why Formulations Need Precise Proportions

Each component in a formulation has a SPECIFIC ROLE:
MEDICINE EXAMPLE โ€” a tablet:
ACTIVE INGREDIENT: the drug itself โ€” must be exact dose (too little = ineffective, too much = toxic).
BINDER: holds the tablet together โ€” must be enough to maintain shape but not prevent dissolution.
FILLER: makes tablet correct size and weight.
COATING: controls release rate (e.g. slow-release medication), protects from stomach acid, makes swallowing easier.
PRESERVATIVE: prevents microbial growth โ€” must not react with active ingredient.
PAINT EXAMPLE:
PIGMENT: provides colour โ€” concentration determines shade.
BINDER: sticks pigment to surface when dried.
SOLVENT: keeps paint liquid for application โ€” evaporates when drying.
ADDITIVES: improve properties (anti-mould, UV resistance, faster drying).
Changing any proportion changes the properties โ€” often for the worse. This is why formulation chemistry requires careful research and testing.

Identifying Formulations in Context

Formulations appear in many everyday contexts:
PETROL AND DIESEL:
Blends of hydrocarbons + additives.
Anti-knock agents prevent premature ignition.
Corrosion inhibitors protect engine components.
SPORTS DRINKS:
Electrolytes (sodium, potassium) at specific concentrations.
Sugars for energy at specific percentages.
Flavourings and pH adjusters.
SUNSCREEN:
UV filters at specific concentrations โ€” too little = ineffective, too much = skin irritation.
Emollients for skin feel.
Preservatives.
FERTILISERS:
Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium in specific NPK ratios for different crops and soils.
Wrong ratios can damage soil and crops.
CHEMICAL TESTS CAN IDENTIFY INDIVIDUAL COMPONENTS:
Chromatography can separate and identify components of a formulation.
Flame tests identify metal ions.
pH measurement identifies acids/alkalis in the mixture.
โš ๏ธ Common Mistake

A formulation is NOT just any mixture โ€” it is a mixture that has been DELIBERATELY designed with SPECIFIC proportions for a specific purpose. An alloy like steel is a formulation (specific amounts of iron and carbon). A random pile of chemicals is just a mixture.

๐Ÿ“Œ Key Note

Formulation: deliberately designed mixture with specific proportions for a purpose. Each component has a role. Examples: medicines (active ingredient + fillers + binders), paints, fuels, fertilisers, alloys, cleaning products, cosmetics. Changing proportions changes properties.

๐ŸŽฏ Matching Activity โ€” Formulation Components

Match each component in a medicine tablet to its role. โ€” drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.

Active ingredient
Drop here
Binder
Drop here
Filler
Drop here
Coating
Drop here
Preservative
Drop here
The drug itself โ€” must be an exact dose for safe and effective treatment
Prevents microbial growth โ€” extends shelf life
Holds the tablet together so it doesn't crumble
Controls release rate, protects from stomach acid or makes swallowing easier
Makes the tablet the right size and weight for handling
โญ Higher Tier Only

Evaluate the components and proportions of specific formulations: pharmaceuticals (drug + excipients), fuels (hydrocarbons + additives), cleaning agents. Atom economy in pharmaceutical synthesis โ€” multi-step synthesis generates more waste. Green chemistry principles applied to formulation design.

๐ŸŽฏ Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. Which of the following is a formulation?
2. Why must the amount of active ingredient in a medicine be precise?
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