Topic 8 - Chemical analysis

Cards (16)

  • What is a pure substance?
    A single element or compound
  • How is a formulation defined?
    A mixture of compounds in measured quantities
  • What are examples of formulations?
    • Fuels
    • Cleaning agents
    • Paints
    • Medicines
    • Alloys
    • Fertilisers
    • Foods
  • Why are alloys used instead of pure metals?
    Alloys are harder than pure metals
  • How is Rf calculated?
    Distance moved by the spot / solvent distance
  • What does an Rf value of 0.85 indicate about a compound?
    It has a higher affinity for the solvent
  • What are the tests for hydrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and chlorine?
    • Hydrogen: pop with burning splint
    • Oxygen: glowing splint relights
    • Carbon dioxide: turns limewater milky
    • Chlorine: bleaches damp litmus paper
  • What are the flame test results for different compounds?
    • Lithium: crimson red flame
    • Sodium: yellow flame
    • Potassium: lilac flame
    • Calcium: orange red flame
    • Copper: green flame
  • How do you test for carbonate anions?
    Add dilute acid and observe fizzing
  • How do you test for sulfate ions?
    Add Ba2+ solution and observe precipitate
  • What do you observe when testing for chlorides with silver nitrate?
    White precipitate of silver chloride forms
  • What is the result of testing bromides with silver nitrate?
    Cream precipitate of silver bromide forms
  • What is the result of testing iodides with silver nitrate?
    Yellow precipitate of silver iodide forms
  • What are instrumental methods?
    Accurate, sensitive, and rapid methods
  • Describe flame emission spectroscopy.
    • Identifies metal ions in solution
    • Measures exact wavelength of emitted light
    • Allows for definite identification
    • Concentration found by light intensity
    • Intensity vs concentration graph used
  • What are cations and anions?
    Cations are positive ions; anions are negative ions