C2 3.6+ Reversible Reactions and Chemical Analysis Flashcards

1
Q

What is a reversible reaction?

A

A reversible reaction is where the products of a reaction can react together to make the original reactants again

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2
Q

Reversible reaction symbol:

A
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3
Q

Litmus paper and reversible reactions:

A
  • Litmus is a complex molecule
  • We will represent it as HLit where H is hydrogen
  • HLit is red
  • If alkali is added, HLit turns into the Lit- ion by losing a H+ ion.
  • Lit- is blue
  • If more acid is added, blue Lit- changes back to red HLit and so on

Summed up as:

HLit(red litmus)<=> H++ Lit-(blue litmus)

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4
Q

Ammonium Chloride reversible reaction:

A

Ammonium chloride <=> ammonia + hydrogen chloride

Ammonium chloride breaks down on heating. It forms ammonia gas and hydrogen chloride gas.

When the gases cool down near the mouth of the tube, they react with each other and re-form the ammonium chloride again

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5
Q

What is a food additive?

A

A food additive is a substance added to food to extend its shelf life or to improve its taste or appearance

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6
Q

Why can paper chromatography work to identify food additives?

A

Paper Chromatography works as some compounds in a mixture dissolve better than others in particular solvents. Their solubility determines how far they travel across the paper

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7
Q

What are the advantages of modern instrumental methods?

A
  • They are highly accurate and sensitive
  • They are quicker
  • They enable very small samples to be analysed
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8
Q

What are the disadvantages of modern instrumental methods?

A
  • Usually very expensive
  • Needs specialist training
  • Gives results that can often only be interpreted by comparison with data from known substances
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9
Q

How can compounds in a mixture be separated?

A

Compounds in a mixture can be separated using gas chromatography

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10
Q

What does the mass spectrometer do?

A

The mass spectrometer identifies the separated compounds. The pattern of peaks it produces identifies the sample

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11
Q

Gas chromatography procedure:

A
  • The sample mixture is vaporised
  • A ‘carrier’ gas moves the vapour through the coiled column
  • The compounds in the sample have different attractions to the material in the column. We say that they have a longer retention time
  • The compounds with weaker attractions to the material in the column leave first. They have shorter retention times
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12
Q

Gas Chromatography Diagram:

A
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13
Q

What can a mass spectrometer do?

A
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14
Q

Mass Spectrometer Diagram:

A

The pattern is then quickly matched against a database of known compounds stored on a computer

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