hi
Im investigating the catalysis of hydrogen peroxide decomposition by copper (II) chloirde, and have come up with an interesting phenomena that i dont quite uderstand! Can someone help?!
ok i have added 6ml of aqueous, 80% saturated, solution of copper (II) chloride to 60g 10% wt/wt concentration aqueous solution of hydrogen peroxide. The dark green copper (II) chloride catalyst immediately changed the clear peroxide blue, and oxygen was evolved.
But when i reduced the amount of catalyst added to 2ml, and then added this to the peroxde, the solution stayed green. Then after a minute or so the solution began to change blue, and also a strange brown substance appeared 'falling' at the top of the solution and then disappeared. Oxygen was then evolved and the solution turned totally to blue.
also i tried decreasing the amount of peroxide. Using 2ml of green aqueous copper (II) chloride added to 20g of 5% conc. peroxide the solution changed immediately to blue and oxygen was immediately evolved.
So whats going on? why does the catalyst to peroxide ratio affect the chemistry of the reaction? Why does the catalyst work and why does the solution change to blue in the first place?
Thanks for any help that you can give
charlie
p.s. im an engineer not a chemist so keep any answers reasonably chemically simple