Analytical Chemistry (Qualitative & Quantitative Analysis)
Grade
13
This lesson covers the techniques used to identify ions and compounds (qualitative analysis) and to determine exact amounts of substances (quantitative analysis). It includes tests for cations, anions, gases, titrations, and instrumental methods.
1. Core Concepts (Short Notes)
27.1 Qualitative Analysis
Used to identify ions and substances. Includes:
Flame tests
Precipitation reactions
Gas identification tests
27.2 Quantitative Analysis
Used to measure amounts of substances. Includes:
Volumetric analysis (titrations)
Gravimetric analysis
Instrumental analysis (AAS, colorimetry)
2. Qualitative Analysis: Identifying Ions
27.3 Flame Tests (Metal Ions)
Li⁺ → crimson red
Na⁺ → bright yellow
K⁺ → lilac
Ca²⁺ → brick red
Ba²⁺ → apple green
Cu²⁺ → blue-green
27.4 Tests for Cations
Using sodium hydroxide (NaOH) or ammonia (NH₃):
(a) Aluminium (Al³⁺):
White ppt, dissolves in excess NaOH
(b) Calcium (Ca²⁺):
White ppt, insoluble in excess
(c) Copper (Cu²⁺):
Blue ppt with NaOH
Deep blue complex with NH₃ (excess)
(d) Iron(II) (Fe²⁺):
Green ppt → turns brown (oxidation)
(e) Iron(III) (Fe³⁺):
Brown ppt
(f) Ammonium (NH₄⁺):
Heating with NaOH → ammonia gas produced (turns red litmus blue)
27.5 Tests for Anions
(a) Carbonate (CO₃²⁻):
Add acid → effervescence (CO₂)
(b) Sulfate (SO₄²⁻):
Add BaCl₂ after acidifying → white ppt of BaSO₄
(c) Chloride (Cl⁻):
Add AgNO₃ → white ppt of AgCl (soluble in NH₃)
(d) Nitrate (NO₃⁻):
Brown ring test using FeSO₄ + concentrated H₂SO₄
27.6 Gas Tests
H₂: pops with lighted splint
O₂: relights glowing splint
CO₂: turns limewater milky
NH₃: turns damp red litmus blue
Cl₂: bleaches litmus
SO₂: turns acidified KMnO₄ from purple → colorless
3. Quantitative Analysis
27.7 Titrations
Used to determine concentration. Essential components:
Burette (titrant)
Pipette (analyte)
Indicator
Types:
Acid–base titrations
Redox titrations
Indicators:
Phenolphthalein → colorless to pink (alkali end point)
Methyl orange → red to yellow (acid-base)
Titration Formula
C₁V₁ / n₁ = C₂V₂ / n₂
27.8 Gravimetric Analysis
Substance is converted to an insoluble solid, filtered, dried, and weighed. Example: Determining sulfate by precipitation as BaSO₄.
4. Instrumental Methods
27.9 Colorimetry
Measures absorbance of colored solutions.
More color → higher concentration.
28.0 Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (AAS)
Identifies metals at very low concentrations.
Used for water testing (Pb, Hg, Cd).
5. Tips & Tricks for Exams
Always acidify when testing for sulfate or halides.
Use excess ammonia to differentiate AgCl, AgBr, AgI.
Record burette readings to 2 decimal places.
Use concordant titration values (within 0.1 cm³).
Choose the correct indicator based on acid/base strength.
Flame test colors are highly examinable.
6. Important Points to Remember
Qualitative analysis identifies ions; quantitative measures amounts.
Precipitation reactions are used to confirm presence of specific ions.
Titrations must be performed carefully with accurate readings.
Modern techniques like AAS are more sensitive and accurate.
වියාචනය (Disclaimer)
Idasara Academy ඉගෙනුම් සම්පත් නිර්මාණය කර ඇත්තේ සිසුන්ට මගපෙන්වීම, පුහුණුව සහ අධ්යයන උපායමාර්ග ලබාදී සහයෝගය දැක්වීමටය.
කෙසේ වෙතත්, සියලුම විභාග සහ නිල අවශ්යතා සඳහා, සිසුන් අනිවාර්යයෙන්ම ශ්රී ලංකා අධ්යාපන අමාත්යාංශයේ, අධ්යාපන ප්රකාශන දෙපාර්තමේන්තුව විසින් ප්රකාශයට පත් කරන ලද නිල පෙළපොත් සහ සම්පත් පරිශීලනය කළ යුතුය.
ජාතික විභාග සඳහා අන්තර්ගතයේ නිල බලය ලත් මූලාශ්රය වනුයේ රජය විසින් නිකුත් කරනු ලබන මෙම ප්රකාශනයි.
