Topic 6 (Separation) Flashcards
How do you test for the purity of a substance?
Check its boiling point and melting point
How do impurities affect the melting and boiling point of a substance?
Impurities increase the boiling point and decrease the melting point. They also cause the substance to melt and boil over a range of temperatures.
When is filtration used?
To separate an insoluble solid from a liquid
What is the residue and filtrate?
Residue in the solid left on filter paper, filtrate is the liquid
What are two limitations of filtration?
-The size of pores must be smaller than the solid particles.
-Some of the liquid is absorbed by the filter paper so not all of it can be collected.
When is evaporation to dryness used?
To separate a dissolved solute from its solution.
What are the limitations of evaporation to dryness?
-Hydrated salts may lose their water of crystallization. —Some substances will decompose when heated strongly.
-If there are multiple impurities in the sample, they will all remain on the evaporating dish.
When is crystallisation used?
To separate a dissolved solute from its solution.
Describe the procedure for crystallisation.
- Heat the solution to evaporate most of the solvent until the solution is saturated. (A saturated solution is a solution where no more solute can dissolve.)
- Cool the hot solution and pour off/filter the solution to obtain the crystals.
- Dry them between sheets of filter paper.
Advantages of crystallisation instead of evaporation?
The remaining solute in the form of crystals will be pure.
Limitations of crystallisation?
- Some of the solute remains dissolved in the saturated solution
-If the substance’s solubility is relatively constant when temperature decreases, very little crystals is produced.
How does crystallisation work?
At higher temperatures, solubility increases. When a saturated solution at high temperature is cooled, the maximum amount of solute that can dissolve decreases, so the remaining solute comes out of the solution and forms crystals.
What are the uses of chromatography?
Testing the purity of substances, identifying what’s in a mixture
How does chromatography work?
Substances are either more attracted to the stationary phase or the moving phase, so they travel at different speeds and separate.
How is Rf value calculated?
Distance travelled by substance/distance travelled by solvent. Rf value will always be between 0 and 1.