Preparing Salts Flashcards
Making a soluble salt from an acid with an insoluble base, carbonate or metal
- half fill a beaker with the acid solution
- add the solid base, carbonate or metal a spatula at a time until at excess
- filter to remove excess solid
- evaporate off most of the water and leave to allow salt to crystallise
making a soluble salt from an acid + alkali both in solution
- carry out an acid alkali titration using an indicator to see the end point
- once you know the average titre, repeat the titration without an indicator, adding that precise volume from the burette
- evaporate off the water to get salt crystals
- dry the crystals
making an insoluble salt from solutions of 2 soluble salts by precipitation
- mix together solutions of 2 suitable soluble salts
- the insoluble salt will appear as a solid precipitate. filter the mixture. the salt is the solid on the filter paper
- wash it by rinsing with distilled water
- scrape onto a watch glass of fresh filter paper to dry
preparation of Copper (II) Sulphate
- measure 20 cm cubed of dilute sulphuric acid using a measuring cylinder and pour it into a small conical flask
- warm the acid using a Bunsen burner, use a thermometer to measure the temperature
- add a little copper oxide powder to the acid and stir
- if all the copper oxide reacts and disappears, add a little more. stop when in excess
- filter the mixture and transfer the filtrate to an evaporating basin
- heat the evaporating basin, over a water bath, until half the water has been evaporated
- pour the solution into a crystallising dish and allow all the water to evaporate.
during preparation of copper (II) sulphate, why was it necessary to warm the sulphuric acid?
- to increase the reaction time
during preparation of copper (II) sulphate, why was it necessary to add copper oxide in excess?
- to ensure all the acid has reacted fully with the solid
how can you tell that the copper oxide was in excess?
- because the powder was beginning to gather at the bottom of the beaker and wouldn’t dissolve away
what was the filtrate and residue in the preparation of copper (II) sulphate?
filtrate: CuSO4 solution
residue: excess copper oxide powder
why should you not evaporate all the water from the copper sulphate solution?
- to prevent driving off the water of evaporation
write a balanced equation for the reaction occurring during preparation of copper (II) sulphate
H2SO4 + CuO => CuSO4 + H2O