C3 Analysis Flashcards

1
Q

What happens when dilute acids are added to metal carbonate powders or solutions?

A

Carbonates react with dilute acids to form bubbles of carbon dioxide.

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2
Q

How would you prove the identity of the compoundwhen dilute acids are added to metal carbonate powders or solutions

A

Carbon dioxide produces a white precipitate with limewater. This turns limewater milky.

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3
Q

How would you test for the presence of halide ions in solution?

A

Halide ions in solution produce precipitates with silver nitrate solution in the presence of dilute nitric acid.

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4
Q

How would you measure the volumes of a strong acid and alkali reacting together?

A

By titration. The alkali is pipetted into a conical flask. A suitable indicator is added. The acid is added carefully from a burette until the indicator shows that the solution is just neutralised.

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5
Q

If you know the concentration of the alkali, how would you find the concentration of the other reactant?

A

the results of a titration can be used to find the concentration of the other reactant.

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6
Q

When 25cm3 of 0.1mol dm-3 NaOH were titrated with 20cm3 of HCl. Find the concentration of the HCl.

A

HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H2O

Number of moles= 0.1x0.025 = 0.0025 moles of NaOH.

So 1:1 ratio of HCl:NaOH

So 0.0025 moles of HCl used

Concentration=0.0025/0.02

= 0.125 mol dm-3

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7
Q

If you had no indicator, what device could you use to measure the pH?

A

A pH meter or a pH sensor on a data-logger.

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