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Chapter 19 PRECIPITATION REACTIONS

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Chapter 19 PRECIPITATION REACTIONS Solubility of Ionic Solids Depends on the balance of two forces: Attraction between H2O molecules and ions of solid. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 19 PRECIPITATION REACTIONS


1
Chapter 19PRECIPITATION REACTIONS
2
Solubility of Ionic Solids
  • Depends on the balance of two forces
  • Attraction between H2O molecules and ions of
    solid.
  • Force of attraction between oppositely charged
    ions within solid.

3
Solubility Rules
  • Use in predicting results of precipitation
    reactions. MEMORIZE THE SOLUBILITY RULES!!!!!
  • Determine ions present and possible products.
  • Use solubility rules to determine if any are
    insoluble.

4
Example 1
  • Ba(NO3)2(aq) Na2CO3(aq)

5
Solubility Rules
  • 1. Salts containing Group I elements are soluble
    (Li, Na, K, Cs, Rb). Exceptions to this rule
    are rare. Salts containing the ammonium ion
    (NH4) are also soluble.
  • 2. Salts containing nitrate ion (NO3-) are
    generally soluble.
  • 3. Salts containing Cl-, Br-, I- are generally
    soluble. Important exceptions to this rule are
    halide salts of Ag, Pb2, and (Hg2)2. Thus,
    AgCl, PbBr2, and Hg2Cl2 are all insoluble.

6
Solubility Rules Continued
  • 4. Most silver salts are insoluble. AgNO3 and
    Ag(C2H3O2) are common soluble salts of silver
    virtually anything else is insoluble.
  • 5. Most sulfate salts are soluble. Important
    exceptions to this rule include BaSO4, PbSO4,
    Ag2SO4 and SrSO4.
  • 6. Most hydroxide salts are only slightly
    soluble. Hydroxide salts of Group I elements are
    soluble. Hydroxide salts of Group II elements
    (Ca, Sr, and Ba) are slightly soluble. Hydroxide
    salts of transition metals and Al3 are
    insoluble. Thus, Fe(OH)3, Al(OH)3, Co(OH)2 are
    not soluble.

7
Solubility Rules Continued
  • 7. Most sulfides of transition metals are highly
    insoluble. Thus, CdS, FeS, ZnS, Ag2S are all
    insoluble. Arsenic, antimony, bismuth, and lead
    sulfides are also insoluble.
  • 8. Carbonates are frequently insoluble. Group II
    carbonates (Ca, Sr, and Ba) are insoluble. Some
    other insoluble carbonates include FeCO3 and
    PbCO3.
  • 9. Chromates are frequently insoluble. Examples
    PbCrO4, BaCrO4
  • 10. Phosphates are frequently insoluble.
    Examples Ca3(PO4)2, Ag2PO4
  • 11. Fluorides are frequently insoluble. Examples
    BaF2, MgF2 PbF2.

8
Example 1 Continued
  • Ba(NO3)2(aq) Na2CO3(aq)

9
Stoichiometry
  • Mole Relations
  • Coefficients in the net ionic equation can be
    used in the usual way to relate the moles of
    reactants and products.
  • Moles of ions can be deduced from solute
    concentrations.

10
Example 2
  • What is the molar concentration of Ba2 and F-
    in a solution containing 0.0075 M BaF2

11
Precipitation Titrations
  • Used to determine the concentration of species in
    solution or in a solid mixture.
  • Indicator shows, usually by color change, when
    the species being analyzed for has been consumed

12
General Principles
  • Involves formation of a precipitate
  • Must determine the volume of a
  • standardized titrant needed to just
  • precipitate all of the ion.
  • Need an indicator or electrode to
  • determine when the precipitation is
  • complete

13
Solubility Equilibria
  • Solubility Product Constant, Ksp
  • Precipitation reactions like all reactions, reach
    a position of equilibrium.
  • Expression for Ksp
  • MaXb lt----------gt aMb bX-a
  • Ksp Mba X-ab

14
Solubility Product Principle
  • In any water solution in equilibrium with a
    slightly soluble ionic compound, the product of
    the concentrations of its ions, each raised to a
    power equal to its coefficient in the solubility
    equation is a constant. This constant, Ksp, has
    a fixed value at a given temperature, independent
    of the concentrations of the individual ions.

15
Two Ion Compound
  • AgCl

16
Three Ion Compound
  • PbCl2

17
Four Ion Compound
  • Al(OH)3

18
Calculation of Ksp
  • Calculated from measured solubility
  • AgCl Ksp (s) (s) s2
  • PbCl2 Ksp (s) (2s)2 4s3
  • Al(OH)3 Ksp (s) (3s)3 27s4

19
Example 3
  • At 20 oC, a saturated aqueous solution of silver
    acetate, AgC2H3O2, contains 1.0 g dissolved in
    100.0 mL of solution. Calculate the Ksp for
    AgC2H3O2.

20
Determination of Solubility
  • In pure water
  • Ksp s2 s (Ksp)1/2
  • Ksp 4s3 s (Ksp/4)1/3
  • Ksp 27s4 s (Ksp/27)1/4

21
Example 4
  • Estimate the solubility of lead (II) bromide in
    (a) moles per liter and (b) grams per liter of
    pure water. Ksp 6.3 x 10-6

22
Uses of Ksp
  • Calculation of concentration of one ion, knowing
    that of the other

23
Example 5
  • You have a solution that has a lead (II)
    concentration of 0.0012 M. What is the maximum
    concentration of chloride ions that would be
    present? Ksp 1.7 x 10-5

24
Uses of Ksp
  • Determination of whether a precipitate will form
  • Compare original concentration product, P, to Ksp
  • if P lt Ksp, no precipitate will form
  • if P gt Ksp, precipitate forms until P becomes
    equal to Ksp

25
Example 6
  • You have 100.0 m of a solution that has a lead
    (II) concentration of 0.0012 M. Does PbCl2
    precipitate when 1.20 g of solid NaCl is added?

26
Determination of Solubility
  • In solution containing a common ion
  • Solubility is much less than in pure water

27
Example 7
  • Calculate the solubility of silver carbonate,
    Ag2CO3, in moles per liter, in pure water.
    Compare this with the molar solublity of Ag2CO3
    in 225 mL of water to which 0.15 g of Na2CO3 has
    been added.

28
Simultaneous Equilibria
  • Two or more reactions occur at the same time is a
    solution, all of them being described as
    equilibrium processes.
  • The equilibrium for the overall reaction is the
    product of the equilibrium constants for the
    summed reactions.
  • That is Knet K1 x K2

29
Solubility and pH
  • Any salt containing an anion that is the
    conjugate base of a weak acid dissolves in water
    to a greater extent than that given by Ksp
    because the ions undergo a hydrolysis reaction.

30
Example 8
  • PbS
  • PbS(s) lt----------gt Pb2(aq) S2-(aq) Ksp
    8.4 x 10-28
  • S2-(aq) H2O(l) lt----------gt HS-(aq) OH-(aq)
    Kb 1 x 105
  • Overall
  • PbS(s) H2O(l) lt---gt Pb2(aq) HS-(aq)
    OH-(aq) Knet 8.4 x 10-23

31
  • In general, the solubility of a salt containing
    the conjugate base of a weak acid is increased by
    addition of a stronger acid to the solution. In
    contrast, the salts are not soluble in strong
    acid if the anion is the conjugate base of a
    strong acid.

32
  • CaCO3 lt--------gt Ca2(aq) CO32-(aq) K Ksp
    3.8 x 10-9
  • CO32-(aq) H2O(l) lt--------gt HCO3-(aq)
    OH-(aq) K Kb 2.1 x 10-4
  • OH-(aq) H3O(aq) lt--------gt 2H2O(l) K
    1/Kw 1 x 1014

33
  • NET
  • CaCO3(s) H3O(aq) lt------gt Ca2(aq)
    HCO3-(aq) H2O(l)
  • Knet (Ksp) (Kb)/(Kw) 79.8

34
Solubility and Complex Ions
  • Examples of complex ions AgCl2-, Ag(S2O3)23-,
    Ag(CN)2-
  • The solubility of certain insoluble compounds
    can be increased when a complex ion is formed.
    Complex ions usually refer to cations in which
    surrounding water molecules have been replaced by
    some other electron pair donor. The equilibrium
    constant will equal the solubility constant times
    the formation constant for the complex ions.
    (Note - Chapter 23 in your textbook covers
    complex ions - their formation and nomenclature)

35
Solubility and Complex ions
  • AgCl(s) 2NH3 ?? Ag(NH3)2 Cl-
  • K (Ksp) (Kf)
  • (1.8 x 10-10) (1.6 x 107) 0.00288 0.0029

36
Example 9
  • Solid gold (I) chloride AuCl, is dissolved when
    excess cyanide ions, CN-, are added to give a
    water soluble complex ion.
  • AuCl(s) 2CN- (aq) ??Au(CN)-(aq) Cl-
  • Show that this equation is the sum of two other
    equations and calculate the Knet.

37
Solubility, Ion Separations, and Qualitative
Analysis
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