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Chemistry
Chemical analysis
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Rihanna Ali
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Cards (28)
Pure substance
A single element or
compound
, not mixed with any other
substance
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Pure substances
They
melt
and
boil
at specific temperatures
Melting and boiling point data can be used to distinguish
pure
substances from
mixtures
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Pure substance
(everyday language)
Substance that has had nothing added to it, so it is
unadulterated
and in its
natural
state
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Formulation
Mixture that has been
designed
as a
useful
product
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Many products are
complex
mixtures in which each chemical has a particular
purpose
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Making formulations
Mixing
the components in carefully measured quantities to ensure the product has the required
properties
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Chromatography
Used to
separate
mixtures and give information to help
identify
substances
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Chromatography
Involves a
stationary phase
and a
mobile phase
Separation depends on the
distribution
of
substances
between the phases
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Rf value
Distance moved by
substance
÷ distance moved by
solvent
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Different compounds have different
Rf
values in different solvents, which can be used to help identify the
compounds
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Compounds in a mixture may separate into different
spots
depending on the solvent but a pure compound will produce a
single
spot in all solvents
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Paper Chromatography
Analytical technique separating compounds by their relative
speeds
in a solvent as it spreads through
paper
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Pigment
Solid
,
coloured
substance
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The more
soluble
a substance is, the further up the paper it
travels
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Paper chromatography
separates different
pigments
in a coloured substance
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Test for hydrogen
1. Use a
burning splint
held at the open end of a
test tube
of the gas
2. Creates a
'squeaky pop'
sound (hydrogen
burns rapidly
)
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Test for oxygen
1. Uses a
glowing
splint inserted into a test tube of the gas
2. Splint
relights
in oxygen
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Test for carbon dioxide
1.
Bubble
the gas through the
limewater
(calcium hydroxide (aq))
2. It will turn
milky
(cloudy)
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Test for
chlorine
1. Use
damp litmus paper
2. When damp litmus paper is put into chlorine gas the litmus paper is
bleached
and turns
white
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Flame tests
Can be used to identify
metal ions
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If a sample containing a mixture of
ions
is used, some
flame
colours can be masked (you won't be able to see them)
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Metal hydroxides
Aluminium,
calcium
and
magnesium
ions form a white precipitate with NaOH
Only
aluminium's
precipitate dissolves when
excess
NaOH is added
Copper(II) produces a
blue
precipitate
Iron(II) produces a
green
precipitate
Iron(III) produces a
brown
precipitate
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Forming metal hydroxides
1. Metal ion +
OH-
->
Metal(OH)n
2. The Na from the NaOH and whatever the metal ion was bonded to will react to form a
compound
together
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Carbonates
React with
dilute
acids to create
carbon dioxide
This gas can be bubbled through
limewater
, if the limewater goes cloudy, the gas is
CO2
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Identifying halides
1. Add dilute
nitric
acid, then
silver nitrate
solution
2.
Chloride
gives a
white
precipitate
3.
Bromide
gives a
cream
precipitate
4.
Iodide
gives a
yellow
precipitate
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Sulfates
Add
dilute hydrochloric acid
, then
barium chloride
solution
A
white precipitate
will form when
sulfate ions
are in this solution
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Instrumental methods
Accurate, sensitive and rapid, making them advantageous
compared
to chemical tests
Used to
detect
and
identify
elements and compounds
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Flame emission spectroscopy
An
instrumental
method used to analyse
metal ions
in solutions
Sample is put into a
flame
and the
light
given out is passed through a spectroscope
Output is a
line spectrum
that can be analysed to identify the metal ions in the solution and measure their
concentrations
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