Analytical Chemistry-ICSE-Class 10|Biswajit Das

Analytical Chemistry-ICSE-Class 10|Biswajit Das

1. Introduction to Analytical Chemistry

Analytical chemistry is the branch of chemistry that deals with the identification and quantitative determination of the components of a substance. In this chapter, we focus on the qualitative analysis of certain metal ions (cations) and their identification using specific chemical reagents, primarily ammonium hydroxide (NH4โ€‹OH) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH). The reactions often produce visible precipitates of different colors and properties.


2. Reactions of Ammonium Hydroxide (NH4โ€‹OH) with Metal Salt Solutions

Ammonium hydroxide is a weak base, so it provides a low concentration of hydroxide ions (OHโˆ’). This is useful for selectively precipitating certain metal hydroxides.

  • Ferrous Salts (Fe2+): With ferrous sulfate solution, it forms a dirty green precipitate of ferrous hydroxide, which is insoluble in excess of the reagent.FeSO4โ€‹+2NH4โ€‹OHโ†’(NH4โ€‹)2โ€‹SO4โ€‹+Fe(OH)2โ€‹โ†“ (Dirty green)
  • Ferric Salts (Fe3+): With ferric chloride solution, it forms a reddish-brown precipitate of ferric hydroxide, which is insoluble in excess.FeCl3โ€‹+3NH4โ€‹OHโ†’3NH4โ€‹Cl+Fe(OH)3โ€‹โ†“ (Reddish-brown)
  • Copper Salts (Cu2+): With copper sulfate solution, it initially forms a pale blue precipitate of copper hydroxide. This precipitate is soluble in excess of ammonium hydroxide, forming a deep blue colored solution of a complex ion.CuSO4โ€‹+2NH4โ€‹OHโ†’(NH4โ€‹)2โ€‹SO4โ€‹+Cu(OH)2โ€‹โ†“ (Pale blue)Cu(OH)2โ€‹+(NH4โ€‹)2โ€‹SO4โ€‹+2NH4โ€‹OHโ†’[Cu(NH3โ€‹)4โ€‹]SO4โ€‹+4H2โ€‹O (Deep blue solution)
  • Zinc Salts (Zn2+): With zinc sulfate solution, it forms a gelatinous white precipitate of zinc hydroxide. This precipitate is soluble in excess, forming a colorless solution.ZnSO4โ€‹+2NH4โ€‹OHโ†’(NH4โ€‹)2โ€‹SO4โ€‹+Zn(OH)2โ€‹โ†“ (Gelatinous white)Zn(OH)2โ€‹+(NH4โ€‹)2โ€‹SO4โ€‹+2NH4โ€‹OHโ†’[Zn(NH3โ€‹)4โ€‹]SO4โ€‹+4H2โ€‹O (Colorless solution)
  • Lead Salts (Pb2+): With lead nitrate solution, it forms a chalky white precipitate of lead hydroxide, which is insoluble in excess.Pb(NO3โ€‹)2โ€‹+2NH4โ€‹OHโ†’2NH4โ€‹NO3โ€‹+Pb(OH)2โ€‹โ†“ (Chalky white)

3. Reactions of Sodium Hydroxide (NaOH) with Metal Salt Solutions

Sodium hydroxide is a strong alkali, so it provides a high concentration of hydroxide ions (OHโˆ’).

  • Ferrous Salts (Fe2+): Forms a dirty green precipitate of ferrous hydroxide, insoluble in excess.FeSO4โ€‹+2NaOHโ†’Na2โ€‹SO4โ€‹+Fe(OH)2โ€‹โ†“ (Dirty green)
  • Ferric Salts (Fe3+): Forms a reddish-brown precipitate of ferric hydroxide, insoluble in excess.FeCl3โ€‹+3NaOHโ†’3NaCl+Fe(OH)3โ€‹โ†“ (Reddish-brown)
  • Copper Salts (Cu2+): Forms a pale blue precipitate of copper hydroxide, insoluble in excess.CuSO4โ€‹+2NaOHโ†’Na2โ€‹SO4โ€‹+Cu(OH)2โ€‹โ†“ (Pale blue)
  • Zinc Salts (Zn2+): Forms a gelatinous white precipitate of zinc hydroxide. This precipitate is soluble in excess, forming a colorless solution.ZnSO4โ€‹+2NaOHโ†’Na2โ€‹SO4โ€‹+Zn(OH)2โ€‹โ†“ (Gelatinous white)Zn(OH)2โ€‹+2NaOHโ†’Na2โ€‹ZnO2โ€‹ (Colorless solution)
  • Lead Salts (Pb2+): Forms a chalky white precipitate of lead hydroxide. This precipitate is soluble in excess, forming a colorless solution.Pb(NO3โ€‹)2โ€‹+2NaOHโ†’2NaNO3โ€‹+Pb(OH)2โ€‹โ†“ (Chalky white)Pb(OH)2โ€‹+2NaOHโ†’Na2โ€‹PbO2โ€‹ (Colorless solution)
  • Calcium Salts (Ca2+): With calcium nitrate, it forms a white precipitate of calcium hydroxide, insoluble in excess.Ca(NO3โ€‹)2โ€‹+2NaOHโ†’2NaNO3โ€‹+Ca(OH)2โ€‹โ†“ (White)

4. Special Tests for Cations

  • Test for Copper (Cu2+): The formation of a deep blue solution with excess NH4โ€‹OH is a confirmatory test.
  • Test for Ferric (Fe3+): The reddish-brown precipitate with NaOH or NH4โ€‹OH is a strong indicator. Another test involves the reaction with potassium ferrocyanide, which gives a deep blue precipitate.
  • Test for Lead (Pb2+): Lead salts, when heated, produce a characteristic color change. For example, lead oxide is yellow when hot and white when cold.2Pb(NO3โ€‹)2โ€‹ฮ”โ€‹2PbO+4NO2โ€‹+O2โ€‹The reaction with potassium iodide produces a bright yellow precipitate of lead iodide, which is a common confirmatory test.Pb(NO3โ€‹)2โ€‹+2KIโ†’2KNO3โ€‹+PbI2โ€‹โ†“ (Bright yellow)

5. Identification of Gases

Certain gases are identified by their characteristic properties or reactions.

  • Ammonia (NH3โ€‹): Pungent smell. Forms dense white fumes with a glass rod dipped in concentrated HCl.
  • Hydrogen Chloride (HCl): Pungent smell. Forms dense white fumes with a glass rod dipped in concentrated NH4โ€‹OH.
  • Carbon Dioxide (CO2โ€‹): Colorless, odorless gas. Turns lime water milky due to the formation of calcium carbonate.
  • Sulfur Dioxide (SO2โ€‹): Pungent, suffocating smell. Turns acidified potassium dichromate solution from orange to green.
  • Hydrogen Sulfide (H2โ€‹S): Smell of rotten eggs. Turns lead acetate paper black.

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