2.2 Group 2 - Alkaline earth metals Flashcards

1
Q

Why is the trend in atomic radius down the group?

A

Atomic radius increases down the group.
As one goes down the group, the atoms have more shells of electrons making the atom bigger.

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2
Q

What is the trend in melting point down the group?

A

Melting points decrease down the group. The metallic bonding weakens as the atomic size increases. The distance between the positive ions and delocalised electrons increases. Therefore the electrostatic attractive forces between the positive ions and the delocalised electrons weaken. For this reason the mp of Group 2 elements decreases slightly going down the group.

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3
Q

What is the trend in 1st and 2nd ionisation energy down group 2?

A

Both decrease down the group- it takes less energy to remove the electrons as they become further and further away from the positive nucleus. the nucleus is more effectively shielded by more inner shells of electrons.

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4
Q

What happens to reactivity down group 2?

A

Reactivity of group 2 metals increases down the group.

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5
Q

How do Group 2 elements react with oxygen?

A

The group 2 metals will burn in oxygen. Mg burns with a bright white flame. The MgO appears as a white powder.
2 Mg + O2 –> 2 MgO
MgO is a white solid with a high melting point due to its ionic bonding.

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6
Q

How else does mMg react with Oxygen?

A

Magnesium will also react slowly in oxygen without a flame. Magnesium ribbon will often have a thin layer of magnesium oxide on it formed by the reaction with oxygen in the air.
2 Mg + O2  2 MgO
The magnesium oxide needs to be removed by emery paper before doing reactions with magnesium ribbon.
If testing for reaction rates with Mg and acid, an un-cleaned Mg ribbon would give a false result because both the Mg and MgO would react but at different rates.
Mg + 2 HCl —> MgCl2 + H2
MgO + 2 HCl —> MgCl2 + H2O

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7
Q

How does Mg react with STEAM?

A

Magnesium reacts in steam to produce magnesium oxide and hydrogen. The Mg would burn with a bright white flame. The MgO appears as a white powder.
Mg(s) + H2O(g) —> MgO(s) + H2(g)

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7
Q

How does Mg react with warm water?

A

Mg will also react with warm water, giving a different magnesium hydroxide product.
Mg + 2 H2OMg(OH)2 + H2
This is a much slower reaction than the reaction with steam and there is no flame.

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8
Q

How do other group 2 metals, not Mg, react with cold water?

A

The other group 2 metals will react with cold water with increasing vigour down the group to form hydroxides.
Ca + 2 H2O (l) —> Ca(OH)2 (aq) + H2 (g) Sr + 2 H2O (l) —> Sr(OH)2 (aq) + H2 (g) Ba + 2 H2O (l) —> Ba(OH)2 (aq) + H2 (g)

The hydroxides produced make the water alkaline (if they are soluble in water).

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9
Q

What would you observe from the reaction with cold water and Group 2 elements?

A

One would observe:

fizzing, (more vigorous down group)

the metal dissolving, (faster down group)

the solution heating up (more down group)

with calcium a white precipitate appears (less precipitate forms down group with other metals)

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10
Q

Why is Titanium useful and what is it used for?

A

Titanium is a very useful metal because it is abundant, has a low density and is corrosion resistant – it is used for making strong, light alloys for use in aircraft.

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11
Q

Why can titanium not be extracted with carbon or by electrolysis?

A

Titanium cannot be extracted with carbon because titanium carbide (TiC) it is formed rather than titanium.
Titanium cannot be extracted by electrolysis because it has to be very pure.

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12
Q

What are the steps in extracting titanium?

A
  1. TiO2 (solid) is converted to TiCl4 (liquid) at 900 degree C:
  2. The TiCl4 is purified by fractional distillation in an argon atmosphere.
  3. The Ti is extracted by Mg in an argon atmosphere at 500 degree C
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13
Q

What are the equations for the extractions of titanium?

A

TiO2 +2Cl2 +2C —> TiCl4 +2CO

TiCl4 + 2Mg —> Ti + 2 MgCl2

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14
Q

Why is titanium oxide converted to Titanium Tetrachloride?

A

TiO2 is converted to TiCl4 as it can be purified by fractional distillation, TiCl4 being molecular (liquid at room temperature) rather than ionic like TiO2 (solid at room temperature).

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15
Q

Why is titanium expensive?

A

Titanium is expensive because:

  1. The expensive cost of the magnesium
  2. This is a batch process which makes it expensive because the process is slower (having to fill up and empty reactors takes time) and requires more labour and the energy is lost when the reactor is cooled down after stopping
  3. The process is also expensive due to the argon, and the need to remove moisture (because TiCl4 is susceptible to hydrolysis).
  4. High temperatures required in both steps
16
Q

What is the trend in solubility of Group 2 hydroxides?

A

Group II hydroxides become more soluble down the group.
All Group II hydroxides when not soluble appear as white precipitates.

17
Q

How soluble is Magnesium hydroxide and Calcium hydroxide?

A

Magnesium hydroxide is classed as insoluble in water. Mg(OH)2(s)

Calcium hydroxide is classed as partially soluble in water and will appear as a white.

18
Q

What is the equation for the formation of Magnesium hydroxide?

A

Mg2+(aq) + 2OH-(aq) —> Mg(OH)2(s).

19
Q

What is the use of magnesium hydroxide?

A

Magnesium hydroxide is used in medicine (in suspension as milk of magnesia) to neutralise excess acid in the stomach and to treat constipation.

It is safe to use because it is so weakly alkaline. It is preferable to using calcium carbonate as it will not produce carbon dioxide gas.

20
Q

What can Calcium hydroxide be used for?

A

An aqueous solution of calcium hydroxide is called lime water and can be used a test for carbon dioxide. The limewater turns cloudy as white calcium carbonate is produced.

21
Q

How would barium hydroxide react with water?

A

Barium hydroxide would easily dissolve in water. The hydroxide ions present would make the solution strongly alkaline.

22
Q

What happens to the solubility of Group 2 sulfates down the group?

A

Group II sulfates become less soluble down the group. BaSO4 is the least soluble.

23
Q

What is a use of BaSO4?

A

BaSO4 is used in medicine as a ‘Barium meal’ given to patients who need x-rays of their intestines. The barium absorbs the x-rays and so the gut shows up on the x-ray image. Even though barium compounds are toxic, it is safe to use here because barium sulfate’s low solubility means it is not absorbed into the blood.

24
Q

How will Barium meal react with Sulfuric acid?

A

If barium metal is reacted with sulfuric acid it will only react slowly, as the insoluble barium sulfate produced will cover the surface of the metal and act as a barrier to further attack.
Ba+H2SO4 —> BaSO4 +H2

The same effect happens to a lesser extent with metals going up the group as the solubility of the sulfates increases.
The same effect does not happen with other acids like hydrochloric or nitric as they form soluble group 2 salts.

25
Q

What reagent is used to test for sulphate ions?

A

BaCl2 solution acidified with hydrochloric acid

26
Q

What would happenIf acidified barium chloride is added to a solution that contains sulfate ions?

A

A white precipitate of barium sulfate forms

27
Q

Why is hydrochloric acid needed to test for sulfate ions?

A

The hydrochloric acid is needed to react with carbonate impurities that are often found in salts which would form a white barium carbonate precipitate and so give a false result. You could not use sulfuric acid because it contains sulfate ions and so would give a false positive result.

28
Q

What would be observed if a carbonate was present when testing for sulfate ions?

A

Fizzing due to CO2 would be observed if a carbonate was present.

29
Q

How can insoluble salts be formed ?

A

Insoluble salts can be made by mixing appropriate solutions of ions so that a precipitate is formed barium nitrate (aq) + sodium sulfate (aq) –> barium sulfate (s) + sodium nitrate (aq)

These are called precipitation reactions. A precipitate is a solid.

30
Q

How can you make an insoluble salt?

A

When making an insoluble salt, normally the salt would be removed by filtration, washed with distilled water to remove soluble impurities and then dried on filter paper.

31
Q

Draw 2 diagrams for Filtration.

A
32
Q

What are spectator ions?

A

Spectator ions are ions that are
* not changing state
* not changing oxidation number

33
Q

How do you write an ionic equation for precipitation reactions?

A

Take full equation

Ba(NO3)2 (aq) + Na2SO4 (aq) —> BaSO4 (s) + 2 NaNO3 (aq)

Separate aqueous solutions into ions.

Ba2+(aq) + 2NO3-(aq) + 2 Na+ (aq)+ SO42-(aq) —> BaSO4(s) + 2 Na+(aq)+ 2 NO3- (aq)

Cancel out spectator ions leaving the simplest ionic equation.

Ba2+ (aq) + SO42-(aq) —> BaSO4 (s).