ST Flashcards

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1
Q

Explain the importance of separation techniques

A

To obtain pure substances as most materials that occur naturally are mixtures and not pure substances
To remove impurities from manufactured products
To carry out identification and analysis on substances present in food and drugs

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2
Q

List 8 examples of separation techniques

A

Magnetic attraction, filtration, crystallisation, evaporation to dryness, distillation, sublimation, use of separating funnel, paper chromatography

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3
Q

What is filtration used for

A

Separate an insoluble solid from liquid

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4
Q

Explain the process of filtration [4]

A

The mixture is poured through a filter which is usually made of paper
The filter paper has tiny holes which allow the particles of water or liquid to pass through but not the larger insoluble solid particle
The liquid passes through the filter paper and is collected as the filtrate
The insoluble solid remains in the filter paper and is collected as the residue

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5
Q

What is evaporation to dryness used for

A

Obtain a dissolved solid from a solution

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6
Q

Explain the process of evaporation to dryness

A

The solution of the dissolved solid is heated in an evaporating dish to evaporate off all of the solvent

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7
Q

What is crystallisation used for

A

Obtain a dissolved solid from a solution as pure well-formed crystals

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8
Q

Explain the process of crystallisation

A

The solution of the dissolved solid is heated in an evaporating dish to evaporate off most of the solvent
As the solvent evaporates, the solution becomes saturated
Allow the hot, saturated solution to cool, where crystals of the dissolved solid form
Filter the mixture to obtain the crystals as the residue
Dry the crystals between pieces of filter paper

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9
Q

Why does crystallisation occur

A

Solubility of most solutes decrease as the temperature decreases

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10
Q

How to tell if solution is saturated

A

Thin film of crystals forms on surface of solution or sides of evaporating dish

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11
Q

What are the disadvantages of evaporation to dryness

A

Solid obtained is not always pure. Any soluble impurities will be left together with the solid after heating
Upon heating and evaporation to dryness, some solids decompose, thus evaporation to dryness should not be used

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12
Q

Advantage of crystallisation

A

Impurities remain in the solution and will not crystalise out. Thus, pure crystals are obtained

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13
Q

When to use crystallisation instead of evaporation to dryness

A

Obtain a pure salt or solid
Prevent thermal decomposition of the salt

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14
Q

When to use evaporation to dryness instead of crystallisation

A

When crystallisation is not suitable - when solubility of the salt does not change significantly with changes in temperature

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15
Q

What is distillation used for

A

Obtain pure liquid from a solution

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16
Q

Explain the process of distillation

A

The solution of the liquid is heated in a flask to boil the liquid solvent
The hot vapour of the liquid rises, and then cooled in a condenser where it condenses to a liquid
This pure liquid is collected in a receiving flask as the distillate
The solute remains in the original flask as the residue

17
Q

What should we note when carrying out distillation

A

The boiling chips are added to the mixture to ensure the smooth boiling process of the liquid
The thermometer is positioned so that its bulb beside the side-arm leading to the condenser. This is to ensure that the thermometer measures the temperature of the vapour, which indicates the boiling point of the liquid distilling over
Water enters the condenser form the bottom and leaves from the top. This is to ensure the complete condensation of all the vapour passing through.
Volatile liquid can be kept in its liquid state by placing the receiver on ice

18
Q

What is magnetic attraction used for

A

separate magnetic solids from non-magnetic solids

19
Q

What is sublimation and what is it used for

A

Process whereby a solid change directly to a gas on heating, without going through liquid state. Used to separate a solid that sublimes form other solids that do not

20
Q

Explain the process of sublimation [4]

A

The mixture of solids is heated in an evaporating dish with an inverted funnel placed above the dish
The solid which sublimes changes to a vapour directly, rises and condenses back to solid directly on the cold surface of the funnel
The pure solid is collected as the sublimate
The solid which does not sublime is not affected by heat and remains in the evaporating dish as the residue

21
Q

How to separate a mixture of sand and sodium chloride [6]

A
  1. Add deionised water to the mixture
  2. Stir the mixture thoroughly. Sodium chloride would dissolve in water, while sand remains insoluble
  3. Filter the mixture. Sand is obtained as the residue and sodium chloride solution is obtained as the filtrate
  4. Wash the sand with deionised water to remove traces of filtrate
  5. Dry the sand in between two places of filter paper
  6. Heat up the sodium chloride solution to evaporate the solution to dryness. Dry sodium chloride is thus obtained
22
Q

Explain the process of using a separating funnel

A

Mixture of immiscible liquids is placed in the funnel, mixed well, and allowed to stand
Liquids form separate layers with the less dense liquid being on top of the denser one
The stopper is removed, and the tap opened, to allow the bottom layer to run off and be collected in a beaker
Top layer remains and can be collected in a separate beaker

23
Q

What is one advantage of paper chromatography

A

can be used with v. small amounts

24
Q

Explain the process of paper chromatography [4]

A
  1. A drop of the mixture to be separated is placed on the start line near the bottom of a strip of chromatography
  2. The spot is allowed to dry, after which the paper is suspended in a suitable solvent with the start line above the solvent level (All this is done in a covered container to minimise evaporation of solvent)
  3. As the solvent travels up the paper, different components in the mixture on the start line dissolve in the solvent and travel up the paper at different speeds according to their solubility in the solvent. (more soluble -> faster + further up paper) (Identical components -> travel same distance + produce same colour when same solvent is used
  4. When solvent reaches top of the paper, the chromatogram is removed and allowed to dry
25
Q

What should be done if the substance is colourless

A

spray the chromatogram with locating agent

26
Q

What should be taken note of when using paper chromatography [4]

A
  1. Chromatography paper should be sufficiently long to ensure complete separation of mixture into its components
  2. Start line should be drawn in pencil and not ink cuz ink might dissolve in the solvent used and thus would interfere with the separation of the mixture
  3. Start line should be above solvent level cuz if below solvent level, original spot mixture would dissolve into the solvent even before it can be separated into its components
  4. Spot to mixture should not be too large to prevent separated components from ‘overlapping’ onto one another