Identifying Ions Prac
Identifying Ions Prac
Identifying Ions Prac
Materials:
Station 1
1. 10 drops of each of the unknown solutions was placed in the reaction well
2. Each solution is tested with 1M nitric acid solution and any precipitation was observed, and the colour of the
precipitation if any
3. Repeat step 1 and 2 for the remain known solutions 0.1M calcium nitrate solution, 1M ammonia solution,
0.1M barium nitrate solution, 0.1M silver nitrate solution
4. Compare the precipitations and colours of the precipitation to the anion precipitation table to identify each
of the unknown substances
Station 2
Station 3
1. 3 drops of each of the unknown solutions was placed in the reaction well
2. Each solution is tested with potassium iodide and observed to see if any precipitation was produced and the
colour of the precipitate if any
3. Steps 1-2 are repeated for the remaining known solutions
4. Compare results to the cation table
Results
Known Solutions Colour of Precipitates and reactions of the Unknown Solutions A,B,C,D
used
Solution A Solution B Solution C Solution D
Ba ( N O3 )2 White White White No reaction
Ca ( N O 3 )2 White White White No reaction
AgN O 3 Yellow White Yellow White
HN O3 Bubbled formed No reaction Bubbles formed No reaction
Solution A - Sodium Carbonate OR Sodium Phosphate
Known Substances Colour of Precipitates and reactions of the Unknown Solutions H,I,J
Solution H Solution I Solution J
Potassium Thiocyanide No reaction Dark red Dark red
Potassium Iodide Bright yellow No reaction No reaction
Potassium Ferrocyanide No reaction Blue No reaction
Discussion
From our series of test performed to unequivocally identify each of the ions present in the unknown solutions A, B,
C, D, E, F, G, H, I we determined that:
A - Sodium Carbonate OR Sodium Phosphate, B – Sodium Sulfate, C – Sodium Carbonate OR Sodium Phosphate, D –
Sodium chloride , E – Calcium Nitrate, F – Copper (II) Nitrate, G – Barium Nitrate , H – Lead Nitrate, I – Iron (II)
Sulfate, J – Iron (III) Chloride
The accuracy of our experiment was relatively poor and invalid as our method was unable to definitely identify some
of the ions in the solution, which was affected due to the cross-contamination of different substances. The cross-
contamination of the different solutions led to conflicting results and hence the solutions could not be distinguished.
An example of this would be in Station 1, where Solution A and Solution C yielded all the same reactions with the
same tests (e.g. Both of the bubbled when tested with nitric acid, both formed a yellow precipitate when tested with
silver nitrate). From the possible unknown anions that were present, only carbonate will effervesce when nitric acid
while phosphate will have no reaction, and only phosphate will produce a yellow precipitate with silver nitrate and
carbonate will form a white precipitate. From this we can deduce that the phosphate and carbonate ions have been
cross contaminated, as both solution A and solution B exhibit properties of both carbonate and phosphate ions and
therefore indicate their presence in both solutions. Furthermore, Solution B forms a white precipitate with Barium,
calcium and silver. As there is no possible unknown ion tested that forms a white precipitate with all three cations
(except for carbonate, however it can be deduced that solution B doesn’t isn’t carbonate as it doesn’t effervesce),
there must again be contaminated. Cross-contamination can also be seen in station 3, where the testing of
Potassium Thiocyanide resulted in a dark red precipitate in both Solution I and Solution J, indicating that Iron (III) ion
was present in both solutions. Therefore, although we were able to deduce the identity of most solutions, many
solutions were contaminated which may have affected our accuracy and thus affected the validity of the experiment
as it failed to achieve the aim of unequivocally identifying each ion in the unknown solutions. The accuracy of the
experiment could possibly be improved by using other confirmatory tests to test the substances, or use a different
method to attempt to distinguish between the ions.
The reliability of the experiment cannot be assessed as the experiment was only performed once, and the
comparison of results between the results of other groups has not been done as of yet.
Conclusion
In conclusion, we were only able to unequivocally identify only some ions in their solutions due to the contamination
of the solutions