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Topic 5 Energy transfers in and between organisms
Required practical 7
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Cards (9)
Describe how pigments from a leaf of a plant can be isolated with paper chromatography
Crush leaves with
solvent
to extract pigments
Draw a
pencil line
on filter /
chromatography paper
, 1 cm above
bottom
Add a drop of
extract
to line (point of
origin
)
Stand paper in boiling tube of (
organic
) solvent below point of origin
Add
lid
and leave to
run
(
solvent
moves up, carrying
dissolved
pigments)
Remove before solvent reaches top and mark
solvent
front with
pencil
Explain why the origin should be drawn in pencil rather than ink
● Ink is soluble in solvent
● So ink would mix with pigments / line would move
Explain why the point of origin should be above the level of the solvent
● Pigments are soluble in solvent
● So would run off paper / spots dissolve into solvent
Explain why a pigment may not move up the chromatography paper in one solvent
● May be soluble in one solvent but insoluble in another
Describe how pigments can be identified
● Rf value = distance moved by spot / distance moved by solvent front
● Compare Rf value to published value
Explain why the solvent front should be marked quickly once chromatography paper is removed
● Once solvent evaporates, solvent front not visible
Explain why the centre of each pigment spot should be measured
● Standardises readings as pigment is spread out
● So allows comparisons to be made
Explain why the obtained Rf values were similar, but not identical, to the published values
● Different solvent / paper / running conditions may affect Rf value
Explain why Rf values are used and not the distances moved by pigment spots
● Solvent / pigment moves different distances
● Rf value is constant for same pigment / can be
compared