Unit 11- testing and analysis Flashcards
1
Q
Aldehydes
A
- can be found using Fehling’s or Benedict’s solutions, which both reduce from blue to brick-red. Adding 5 drops of it into a warm test tube containing substance
- Tollens reagent also works, this time it costs the tube in a silver mirrored precipitate
2
Q
Ketones
A
-can be found using the same test as they do exactly the opposite of an aldehyde
3
Q
Carboxylic acids
A
- add CaCO3 to them and run the product through the limewater test for Co2
- if positive it’s an acid
4
Q
Alkenes
A
-can be distinguished by the bromine test as Br2 undergoes electrophilic addition and changes from orange to colourless
5
Q
Mass spectrometry
A
- electrospray ionisation/electron guns can ionise a species to give them all a +1 charge
- Ions accelerated by an electric field as detector plate has negative charge
- all ions given same energy, so heavier ions accelerate slower
- ions take one electron from the detector and produce a current equivalent to their mass
6
Q
Mass spectrometry graphs
A
- taller peaks = more abundant, Mr given by M/z on axis
- often M+1 peaks due to isotopes
- bonds can be fragmented in spectrometry forming other ions
- almost every possible fragmented ions will be produced and detected, as there is a roughly equal chance of each one bring produced
- Peaks must then be analysed to find the right peak
7
Q
IR spectroscopy
A
- covalent bonds absorb IR energy and stretch or bend, causing a detectable wave
- every bond has a different wavenumber (1/wavelength)
- sample is pressed between salt plates and has IR fired at it like an X-ray scanner
- what isn’t absorbed is detected, graph shows upside down peaks where more energy is absorbed
- this detects functional groups using known wavelengths
- 1000-1500 cm^-1 is fingerprint reigin where every molecule is unique