Topic 8- Chemical Analysis Flashcards

1
Q

Define a pure substance

A

A pure substance is one that is made up of just one substance. That substance can be an element or a compound

They melt and boil at specific temperatures

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2
Q

Define a mixture

A

A mixture contains more than one type of substance, not chemically combines and not in a fixed composition.

These substances can be elements or compounds, or a combination

They will melt or boil over a range of temperatures

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3
Q

Define a formulation

A

A mixture that has been designed as a useful product

They are made by mixing the components in carefully measured quantities to ensure that the product has the required properties

E.g: medicinal drugs, fuels, cleaning agents, paints, medicines, alloys, fertilisers and foods

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4
Q

What is paint made up of?

A

A pigment to provide colour

A binder to help the paint attach itself to an object and to form a protective film when dry

A solvent, to help the pigment and binder spread well during painting by thinning them out

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5
Q

Define an alloy

A

It is a mixture made up of two or more metals

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6
Q

Explain how an alloy behaves differently to pure gold so that it is suitable for jewellery

A

The layers are distorted due to the varying sizes of atoms meaning they can’t slide over each other. This means they are harder than pure metals, making them suitable for jewellery

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7
Q

Describe paper chromatography

A

Make sure that the chromatography paper can fit into the boiling tube

Use a pencil to draw a horizontal base line, 1cm from the bottom of the paper

Use a pencil to draw a cross on the centre of the base line

Use a paint brush of capillary tube to add some or the food colouring onto the cross and allow to dry

Fold the top edge of the chromatography paper over a wooden splint and keep in place with a paper clip

Add 0.5cm not fin..

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8
Q

How is Rf calculated?

A

Distance moved by the spot/distance moved by solvent

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9
Q

Test for hydrogen

A

Use a burning splint held at the open end of a test tube of the gas

Creates a ‘squeaky pop’ sound (hydrogen burns rapidly)

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10
Q

Test for oxygen

A

Uses a glowing splint inserted into a test tube of the gas

Splint relights in oxygen

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11
Q

Test for carbon dioxide

A

Bubble the gas through the limewater (calcium hydroxide (aq))

It will turn milky

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12
Q

Test for chlorine

A

Use damp litmus paper

When damp litmus paper is put into chlorine gas, the litmus paper is bleached and turns white

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13
Q

Flame test for lithium

A

Crimson

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14
Q

Flame test for sodium

A

Yellow

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15
Q

Flame test for potassium

A

Lilac

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16
Q

Flame test for calcium

A

Orange-Red

17
Q

Flame test for copper

A

Green

18
Q

Aluminium, calcium and magnesium ions form what colour precipitate with NaOH

A

White precipitate

19
Q

Which of the metal hydroxides dissolves when excess NaOH is added

A

Aluminium

20
Q

What colour precipitate does copper (II) produce?

A

Blue

21
Q

What colour precipitate does iron (II) produce?

A

Green

22
Q

What colour precipitate does iron (III) create?

A

Brown

23
Q

Describe the test for carbonate anions

A

Carbonates react with dilute acids to create carbon dioxide

The gas can be bubbled through limewater, if the limewater goes cloudy, the gas is CO2

24
Q

Describe tests for halides

A

First add dilute nitric acid, followed by silver nitrate solution

25
Q

What colour precipitate does chloride give?

A

White

26
Q

What colour precipitate does bromide give?

A

Cream

27
Q

What colour precipitate does iodine give?

A

Yellow

28
Q

How do you test for sulfates?

A

First add dilute hydrochloric acid, followed by barium chloride solution

A white precipitate will form when sulfate ions are present

29
Q

Why are instrumental methods more advantageous compared to chemical tests?

A

Accurate

Sensitive and rapid

Useful when the amount of sample is very small