The document discusses making and naming salts through neutralization reactions. Salts can be either soluble or insoluble depending on the reactants. The name of a salt indicates the metal and acid components. Methods for preparing soluble and insoluble salts involve considering solubility and presence of water in the crystals.
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Salt
The document discusses making and naming salts through neutralization reactions. Salts can be either soluble or insoluble depending on the reactants. The name of a salt indicates the metal and acid components. Methods for preparing soluble and insoluble salts involve considering solubility and presence of water in the crystals.
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Making salt
The salts made in
neutralisation reactions can be either soluble or insoluble. Making of salt The method of preparing and purifying the salt depends on whether or not it is soluble in water. Naming salts
A salt is any compound formed by
the neutralisation of an acid by a base. The name of a salt has two parts. The first part comes from the metal, metal oxide or metal carbonate. The second part comes from the acid. Naming salts
You can always work out the name of the salt by looking at the reactants:
• nitric acid always produces salts that end in nitrate and
contain the nitrate ion, NO3- • hydrochloric acid always produces salts that end in chloride and contain the chloride ion, Cl- • sulfuric acid always produces salts that end in sulfate and contain the sulfate ion, SO42- Naming salts For example, if potassium oxide reacts with sulfuric acid, the products will be potassium sulfate and water. The table shows some more examples Metal Acid Salt reacts Sodium Sodium hydroxide Hydrochloric acid to make with chloride reacts Copper Copper oxide Hydrochloric acid to make with chloride reacts Sodium hydroxide Sulfuric acid to make Sodium sulfate with reacts Zinc oxide Sulfuric acid to make Zinc sulfate with Naming salts
ammonia forms ammonium salts when it
reacts with acids. For instance, ammonia reacts with hydrochloric acid to make ammonium chloride. Preparing salts • Some salts can be extracted by mining but others need to be prepared in the laboratory. • There are two key ideas to consider when preparing salts: • Is the salt being formed soluble or insoluble in water? • Is there water of crystallisation present in the salt crystals? Salt solubility Preparing soluble salts Method A: adding acid to a solid metal, base or carbonate Example: Preparation of pure, Hydrated Copper (II) Sulphate Crystals using Method A Acid = Dilute Sulfuric Acid Insoluble base = Copper (II) Oxide Method: • Add dilute sulfuric acid into a beaker and heat using a Bunsen burner flame • Add copper (II) oxide (insoluble base), a little at a time to the warm dilute sulfuric acid and stir until the copper (II) oxide is in excess (stops disappearing) • Filter the mixture into an evaporating basin to remove the excess copper (II) oxide • Leave the filtrate in a warm place to dry and crystallize • Decant excess solution • Blot crystals dry Equation: Copper (II) Oxide + Dilute Sulfuric Acid → Copper (II) Sulphate + Water Preparing soluble salts Method B: reacting a dilute acid and alkali Method • Use a pipette to measure the alkali into a conical flask and add a few drops of indicator (phenolphthalein or methyl orange) • Add the acid into the burette and note the starting volume • Add the acid very slowly from the burette to the conical flask until the indicator changes to appropriate colour • Note and record the final volume of acid in burette and calculate the volume of acid added (starting volume of acid – final volume of acid) • Add this same volume of acid into the same volume of alkali without the indicator • Heat to partially evaporate, leaving a saturated solution • Leave to crystallise decant excess solution and allow crystals to dry