Chem
Chem
Chem
Just leaving your suspension of a solid in liquid to stand achieves a separation especially if the particles
of solid are large enough
Once the solid has settled to the bottom the liquid can be carefully pulled off a process called decanting
filtration methods include filter paper, filter funnel, the solid remains in the filter as residue, support,
the liquid filtrates through, it is called the filtrate
more generally useful method for separating solids from liquid is filtration
The process can be speeded up by using a vacuum pump to suck the liquid through the filter paper in a
Buncher funnel and flask
Various large scale filtration methods are used in industry. Perhaps the most useful of these or filter
beds used to treat water for household use
another method operating an insoluble solid from a liquid is centrifugation where the mixture is pawn at
high speed in a centrifuge.
This causes the solid to be deposited at the bottom of the centrifuge tube. That liquid can be carefully
decanted off.
mixtures of two immiscible liquids can be separated if the mixture is placed in a separating funnel and
allowed to stand
the liquid's separate into different layers. The lower, denser layer is then taped off at the bottom.
the separation of a solid from a mixture of solids depends largely on the particular substance being
purified.
Separation can be based on differences in density, magnetic properties (separating iron objects from
other metal in scrapyard, For instance), or sublimation.
in the laboratory it usually helps if the mixture is ground to a powder before any separation is
attempted.
By far the most important method for separating this type of mixture is based on differences in solubility
The separate this type of mixture is often slightly more complicated because there is no physical
separation of the phases in the original mixture.
The methods of separation usually depend on solubility properties or on differences in boiling point.
Separating a solid form, a solution in a liquid can be carried out by evaporation or crystallisation.
evaporation gives only a powder, but crystallisation can result in proper crystals.
Both processes begin by evaporating away the liquid but, when crystals are needed, evaporation is
stopped when the solution has been concentrated enough.
while the solvent is evaporating dip glass rod into the solution from time to time. One small crystal form
on the rod, take the solution off the water bath, and leave it to cool.
boiling water
gauze
an evaporation method. This method should not be used if the solvent is flammable. Instead, use an
electric heating element and an oil or water bath.
The boiling point of the liquid is usually very much lower than that of the dissolved solid
The liquid is more volatile than the dissolved solid and can be easily evaporated up in a distillation flask
It is condensed by passing it Down a water cooled condenser, and then collected as the distillate.
So separating the liquids from a mixture of two or more miscible liquids is again based on the fact that
the liquid will have different boiling points.
the boiling points are closer together than for a solid and liquid solution a fractional distillation must be
used.
infraction installation the most volatile liquid in the mixture distils over first and the least volatile liquid
boils over last
When a mixture of two is heated, ethanol and water vapours entered the fractionating column. glass
beads in the column provide a large surface area for condensation
Evaporation and condensation take place many times as the vapours rise up the column. Ethanol passes
through the condenser first and as the temperature of the column is raised Above its boiling point
Water condenses in the column and flows back into the flask because the temperature of the column is
below its boiling point of 100 degrees Celsius
By watching the temperature carefully, the two liquids fractions can be collected separately
fractional distillation is used to separate any solution containing liquids with different boiling points. The
liquid in the mixture with the lowest boiling point (the most volatile) distils over first. the final liquid to
distil over is the one with the highest boiling point (The least volatile). fractional distillation can be
adapted as a continuous process and is used industrially separate:
Separating two or more dissolved solids in solution can be carried out by chromatography.
There are several types of chromatography, but they all follow the same basic principles.
Paper chromatography is probably the simplest form to set up and is very useful if we want to analyse
the substance present in a solution.
a drop off concentrated solution is usually placed on a pencil line near the bottom edge of a strip
chromatography paper.
The paper is then dipped in the solvent. level of the solvent must start below sample.
stage one
the solvent (shadow amount, below the baseline) begins to move up the paper by capillary action
Stage 2
The solvent moves up the paper, taking different components along at different rates
stage 3
The different components string out along the paper like runners in a race.
Many different solvents are used in chromatography. Water and organic solvents (carbon containing
solvents) such as ethanol, ethanoic acid solution and propanone are common.
Organic solvents are useful because they dissolve many substances that are insoluble in water.
when an organic solvent is used, the process is carried out in a tank with a lid to stop the solvent
evaporating.
as the solvent moves up the paper come out the substances are carried with that and begin to separate.
the run is stopped just before the solvent front reaches the top of the paper.
the distance moved by a particular spot is measured and related to the position of the solvent front.
the ratio of these distance is called the RF value, or retention factor this value is used to identify the
substance:
the usefulness of chromatography has been greatly increased using locating agents.
these mean that the method can be also used for separating substances that are not coloured.
The paper is treated with locating agent after the chromatography run. The agent reacts with the
samples to produce coloured spots.
Chromatography has proved very useful in the analysis of biologically important molecules such as
sugars, amino acids, and nucleotide bases.
Molecules such as amino acids can be seen if the paper, chromatogram is viewed under ultraviolet light
Paper chromatography is one test that can be used to cheque for the purity of a substance.
If this happened is pure it should only give one spot when run in several different solvents.
The identity of the sample can also be checked by comparing its RF value to that offer sample we know
to be pure.
These organic solvents are important because they will often dissolve substances that do not dissolve in
water.
if you try to dissolve a substance such as copper 2 sulfate in a fixed volume of water, the solution
becomes more concentrated as we add more solid.
A concentrated solution contains a high proportion of solute; a dilute solution contains a small
proportion of solute.
The concentration of a solution is the mass of solute dissolved in a particular volume of solvent, usually
one decimetre3.
If we keep adding more solid, a point is reached when no more will dissolve at that temperature.
The concentration of solute in a saturated solution is the solubility of the solute at that temperature.
When a saturated solution is cooled, it can hold less solute at the lower temperature, and some solute
crystallises out.
1cooling
2increasing pressure
Unlike most solid, gases become less soluble in water as the temperature rises.
The Solubility of gases from the air and water is quite small, but the amount of dissolved oxygen is
enough to support fish and other aquatic life.
substances are not only mixing with each other but are also chemically reacting.