6.1.3 chromatography and qualitative analysis Flashcards
what is the test for alkenes and what is the positive result
add equal parts of the substance you are analysing and bromine water. if bromine water turns from orange to colourless a c=c is present
what is the test for haloalkane and what is the positive result
add 5 drops of unknown to a test tube. add 1cm3 of ethanol and 1cm3 aqueous silver nitrate. warm test tube in water bath.
if present a coloured precipitate forms
- chloroalkane forms white precipitate
- bromoalkane forms a cream precipitate
- iodoalkane forms a yellow precipitate
what is the test for phenols and what is a positive result
- add a small spatula of solid NaOH. the solid will dissolve is acid (phenol) is present. or use indicator to show acidity
- add a solid carbonate if nothing happens phenol is present as only a strong acid will react with it
what is the test for carboxylic acids and what is a positive result
- add sodium carbonate and if gas is formed then bubble it through limewater. carboxylic acid is present the limewater turns cloudy
what is chemical is bradys reagent
2,4-DNP (2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine)
test for aldehydes and ketones and what is the positive result
dissolve 2,4-DNP in sulfuric acid , water and methanol. add this to the unknown and shake. if an orange precipitate forms aldehydes and ketones are present.
what is the test for aldehydes and what is the positive result
we use tollens reagent.
add silver nitrate solution and a few drops of NaOH. a brown precipitate should form. add dilute ammonia until the precipitate dissolves.
add unknown and place in a water bath. if solution forms a silver mirror an aldehyde is present
test for primary and secondary alcohol
add acidified dichromate and heat in a water bath. colour change from orange to green if alcohol is primary or secondary
what is thin layer chromatography
use a chromatography plate covered in a thin layer of silica gel. draw a pencil line near bottom and a spot of unknown. place in a beaker of solvent. product separate out. draw a pencil line where solvent ends up.
what is the formula for rf values
distance travelled by spot / distance travelled by solvent
what is gas chromatography
sample analysed is injected into a stream of gas which carries it through a coiled tube coated with liquid (oil) or solid.
it constantly dissolves and evaporates as it goes through. as it leaves the tube a peak is recorded
what is retention time
time taken for substance to go through the tube and reach the detector
what does the area under a peak show
relative amount of substance in mixture
how do we determine concentration of a substance
create standard solutions of substance at different concentrations. run each solution through the gas chromatography machine and calculate area under each peak. plot a area concentration graph and use this to determine the concentration of the peak in the first gas chromatogram
how does solubility effect retention time
it determines how long each component spends dissolved in the oil or solid and how long the take moving along the tube in the gas. a highly soluble substance will have a longer retention time