Hello,
For a Gen. Chem. (I) project, I need to synthesize flourite using only these available minerals: Calcite (calcium carbonate), Villiaumite (sodium fluoride), also available are HCl and water. Apparently, I should be able to do this in two Rx's. CaCO3 is insoluble in water but does react with weak acids. NaF is soluble in water. So I have concluded that I need to react CaCO3 with the HCl and NaF with H2O. But I am unsure of what state the products will be and what type of reactions took place (Precipitation, Aqueous, Neutralization). Also unsure of how to isolate CaF2 (flourite) after these steps.
Possible chemical equations so far:
1. CaCO3(s) + HCl(aq) --> CaCl(soluble salt) + HCO3(g?)
or
2. NaF(s) + H2O(aq) --> NaO(?) + HF(acid, state ?)
then
3. CaCO3 + HF --> CaF(ppt?) + HCO3(g)
or
4. NaF + HCl --> NaCl (soluble salt) + HF
then
#3 above
Of course isolating the CaF2 is still a mystery to me after I get the reaction. Since CaF2 is insoluble it should form as a ppt right?
As you can see I'm not sure what route to go. Any hints or insights would be appreciated.
Thanks,
greeneyedcritter