ANALYSIS FOR IONS   Name __________________________  Section _________ Date _______________   Determination of Cation and Anion of Unknown Salt   Although you are most familiar with table salt, which is the salt used in cooking and seasoning of foods, the family of "salts" has many members. Most are found in nature, such as the chlorides of sodium, potassium and calcium, but all can be formed in the laboratory as a product of a neutralization reaction, that is a reaction between an acid and a base in water. The formation of table salt, NaCl, results by reacting hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide as represented by the following equation:                                     HCl(aq)  +  NaOH(aq)  →  NaCl(aq)  +  H2O(l) Your unknown salt contains only one cation. It may be any one of the following four:                                                  Na+, K+, Ca2+ or Fe3+ Your unknown salt contains only one anion. It may be any one of the following four:                                                  CO32-, Cl-, SO42- or PO43- Thus, there are many possible combinations, and you must determine which salt is the unknown given to you.   Testing for the Cation of the Unknown Salt   You should observe only one positive test for the cation in your unknown.   a) In a flame tests for Na+, K+, Ca2+, the color of the flame is bright yellow, violet, or orange-red, respectively. However, the orange-red flame for calcium may not be very prominent. Thus, calcium will require a confirmatory test, and will form a white precipitate when treated with ammonium oxalate (NH4)2C2O4. When a salt containing Fe3+ is treated with potassium thiocyanate (KSCN) solution, a blood-red colored solution will form. By now you should have determined which cation is present in your   Testing for the Anion of the Unknown Salt   You should observe only one positive test for the anion in your unknown.   Any salt containing CO32- ions will react promptly with an acid (e.g., HCl(aq)) to form carbon dioxide gas, which will foam and bubble up in the test tube. If the unknown solution immediately forms a white precipitate when mixed with silver nitrate (AgNO3), and if the precipitate is permanent (that is, it cannot be dissolved in nitric acid), then it proves that chloride ion (Cl-) is present.  Sulfate ions will form a permanent white precipitate when treated with barium chloride (BaCl2(aq)) and nitric acid (HNO3). The proof that PO43- ions are present is the formation of a bright yellow precipitate when a phosphate salt is treated with ammonium molybdate, ((NH4)2MoO4) and nitric acid (HNO3). A positive result would indicate which anion? By now you should have determined what anion is present in your 3. Conclusion         The report form contains observations that were made by one of your classmates. Based on these observations, fill in the blanks to indicate if the ions are present or absent. From the overall set of observations decide which of the salts is your unknown by giving its cation and anion, formula, and name at the end of the report sheet.   Deliverable   Complete the report by answering the questions on page 5. Submit pages 3,4, and 5 to your instructor on the due date. PART B: ANION TESTS OPERATION OBSERVATION CONCLUSIONSection 4: Test for Carbonate (CO32-) ions 6 M HCl with Na2CO3 Bubbling 6 M HCl with NaCl Clear solution 6 M HCl with Na2SO4 Clear solution 6 M HCl with Na3PO4 Clear solution 6 M HCl with unknown Clear solution Section 5: Test for Chloride (Cl-) ions After HNO3 addedAgNO3 with Na2CO3 / HNO3 White precipitate Clear solution AgNO3 with NaCl / HNO3 White precipitate Precipitate stays AgNO3 with Na2SO4 / HNO3 Clear solution Clear solution AgNO3 with Na3PO4 / HNO3 White precipitate Clear solution AgNO3 with unknown / HNO3 White precipitate Clear solution Section 6: Test for Sulfate (SO42-) ions After HNO3 addedBaCl2 with Na2CO3 / HNO3 White precipitate Clear solution BaCl2 with NaCl / HNO3 Clear solution Clear solution BaCl2 with Na2SO4 / HNO3 White precipitate Precipitate stays BaCl2 with Na3PO4 / HNO3 White precipitate Clear solution BaCl2 with unknown / HNO3 White precipitate Precipitate stays Section 7: Test for Phosphate (PO43-) ions(NH4)2MoO4 with Na2CO3 Clear solution (NH4)2MoO4 with NaCl Clear solution (NH4)2MoO4 with Na2SO4 Clear solution (NH4)2MoO4 with Na3PO4 Yellow precipitate (NH4)2MoO4 with unknown Clear solution The unknown anion is _______________ Summary from Observations and Conclusions in PARTS A and B: Unknown Sample # ____XYZ______ Cation __________ Anion ___________Unknown Name __________________________ Unknown Formula______________

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ANALYSIS FOR IONS

 

Name __________________________  Section _________ Date _______________

 

Determination of Cation and Anion of Unknown Salt

 

Although you are most familiar with table salt, which is the salt used in cooking and seasoning of foods, the family of "salts" has many members. Most are found in nature, such as the chlorides of sodium, potassium and calcium, but all can be formed in the laboratory as a product of a neutralization reaction, that is a reaction between an acid and a base in water. The formation of table salt, NaCl, results by reacting hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide as represented by the following equation:

                                    HCl(aq)  +  NaOH(aq)  →  NaCl(aq)  +  H2O(l)

Your unknown salt contains only one cation. It may be any one of the following four:

                                                 Na+, K+, Ca2+ or Fe3+

Your unknown salt contains only one anion. It may be any one of the following four:

                                                 CO32-, Cl-, SO42- or PO43-

Thus, there are many possible combinations, and you must determine which salt is the unknown given to you.

 

  1. Testing for the Cation of the Unknown Salt

 

You should observe only one positive test for the cation in your unknown.

 

  1. a) In a flame tests for Na+, K+, Ca2+, the color of the flame is bright yellow, violet, or orange-red, respectively. However, the orange-red flame for calcium may not be very prominent.
  2. Thus, calcium will require a confirmatory test, and will form a white precipitate when treated with ammonium oxalate (NH4)2C2O4.
  3. When a salt containing Fe3+ is treated with potassium thiocyanate (KSCN) solution, a blood-red colored solution will form.
  4. By now you should have determined which cation is present in your

 

  1. Testing for the Anion of the Unknown Salt

 

You should observe only one positive test for the anion in your unknown.

 

  1. Any salt containing CO32- ions will react promptly with an acid (e.g., HCl(aq)) to form carbon dioxide gas, which will foam and bubble up in the test tube.
  2. If the unknown solution immediately forms a white precipitate when mixed with silver nitrate (AgNO3), and if the precipitate is permanent (that is, it cannot be dissolved in nitric acid), then it proves that chloride ion (Cl-) is present. 
  3. Sulfate ions will form a permanent white precipitate when treated with barium chloride (BaCl2(aq)) and nitric acid (HNO3).
  4. The proof that PO43- ions are present is the formation of a bright yellow precipitate when a phosphate salt is treated with ammonium molybdate, ((NH4)2MoO4) and nitric acid (HNO3). A positive result would indicate which anion?
  5. By now you should have determined what anion is present in your
  6. 3. Conclusion

 

      The report form contains observations that were made by one of your classmates. Based on these observations, fill in the blanks to indicate if the ions are present or absent. From the overall set of observations decide which of the salts is your unknown by giving its cation and anion, formula, and name at the end of the report sheet.

 

  1. Deliverable

 

Complete the report by answering the questions on page 5. Submit pages 3,4, and 5 to your instructor on the due date.

PART B: ANION TESTS

OPERATION OBSERVATION CONCLUSION
Section 4: Test for Carbonate (CO32-) ions
6 M HCl with Na2CO3 Bubbling
6 M HCl with NaCl Clear solution
6 M HCl with Na2SO4 Clear solution
6 M HCl with Na3PO4 Clear solution
6 M HCl with unknown Clear solution

Section 5: Test for Chloride (Cl-) ions After HNO3 added
AgNO3 with Na2CO3 / HNO3 White precipitate Clear solution
AgNO3 with NaCl / HNO3 White precipitate Precipitate stays
AgNO3 with Na2SO4 / HNO3 Clear solution Clear solution
AgNO3 with Na3PO4 / HNO3 White precipitate Clear solution
AgNO3 with unknown / HNO3 White precipitate Clear solution

Section 6: Test for Sulfate (SO42-) ions After HNO3 added
BaCl2 with Na2CO3 / HNO3 White precipitate Clear solution
BaCl2 with NaCl / HNO3 Clear solution Clear solution
BaCl2 with Na2SO4 / HNO3 White precipitate Precipitate stays
BaCl2 with Na3PO4 / HNO3 White precipitate Clear solution
BaCl2 with unknown / HNO3 White precipitate Precipitate stays

Section 7: Test for Phosphate (PO43-) ions
(NH4)2MoO4 with Na2CO3 Clear solution
(NH4)2MoO4 with NaCl Clear solution
(NH4)2MoO4 with Na2SO4 Clear solution
(NH4)2MoO4 with Na3PO4 Yellow precipitate
(NH4)2MoO4 with unknown Clear solution

The unknown anion is _______________

Summary from Observations and Conclusions in PARTS A and B:
Unknown Sample # ____XYZ______ Cation __________ Anion ___________

Unknown Name __________________________ Unknown Formula______________

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