Volume fraction (φA) is defined as
where VA is the volume of the specified component and the Vi are the volumes of all the components of a mixture prior to mixing.
Fraction is a ratio of two quantities of the same kind, the numerator quantity applying to one constituent (or part) of the system and the denominator to the sum of quantities for all constituents (parts) of the system. When applied to mixtures fractions represent a group of three quantities: mass fraction, volume fraction and amount fraction (or mole fraction equal to the number fraction).
Amount fraction, xA, (y for gaseous mixtures) is the ratio of the amount of substance (number of moles) of substance A to the total amount of substance in a mixture.
Volume ratio is equal to volume (VA) of one component and volume (VB) of other component’s proportion.
Mass fraction (wA) is the ratio of the mass of substance A to the total mass of a mixture.
Volume concentration (σ) is equal to volume (VA) of solute and volume (V) of solution proportion. Volume concentration differs from volume fraction because the sum of solution components volume is almost always different than the solution volume.
Solutions are homogenous mixtures of several components. The component which is found in a greater quantity is called the solvent and the other components are called solutes. Quantitative composition of a solution can be expressed by concentration (amount, mass, volume and number), by fraction (amount, mass, and volume), ratio (amount, mass, and volume) and by molality. Amount, mass, and volume ratio are numerical, nondimensional units and are frequently expressed as percentage (% = 1/100), promile (‰ = 1/1000) or parts per million (ppm = 1/1 000 000). If it is not defined, it is always related to the mass ratio.
Absorptance (α) is the ratio of the radiant or luminous flux in a given spectral interval absorbed in a medium to that of the incident radiation. Also called absorption factor.
Generalic, Eni. "Volumenski udio." Croatian-English Chemistry Dictionary & Glossary. 29 June 2022. KTF-Split. {Date of access}. <https://glossary.periodni.com>.
Glossary
Periodic Table