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Topic: organic problem: colourless compound, red compound ?  (Read 2476 times)

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Offline chehemi123

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organic problem: colourless compound, red compound ?
« on: October 09, 2012, 11:12:19 AM »
I’ve got the following problem..

Silver thiosulfate (Ag2S2O3) and bromine are put together. The solvent is diethyl ether.
Notice:  at low temperatures there is a colourless sediment. When melting this sediment it reacts to a red compound.

I don’t really know what could have happened. Maybe the sediment is silver bromide or silver tetrathiosulfate ? But I am not sure if they are colourless compounds and if they react to a red compound? And what about this red compound?
Could you solve the problem or give me a hint?

That would be awesome…TIA :)

Offline Hunter2

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Re: organic problem: colourless compound, red compound ?
« Reply #1 on: October 10, 2012, 12:53:57 AM »
Silver thiosulfat it self is white and its unstable in water. It decompose to silver sulfide sulfur dioxide and sulfur.

Did you add bromine or bromide?

bromine is red brown.

Offline chehemi123

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Re: organic problem: colourless compound, red compound ?
« Reply #2 on: October 10, 2012, 04:29:54 AM »
the task says bromine...

i thought of a redox reaction:

thiosulfate ions --> tetrathiosulfate ions     (oxidation)
bromine --> bromide     (reduction)

maybe? but what about the colourless compound then? and the red one?

Silver thiosulfat it self is white and its unstable in water.
is colourless = white? and i think there is no water? the solvent is diethyl ether..

thanks for your answer!

Offline chehemi123

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Re: organic problem: colourless compound, red compound ?
« Reply #3 on: October 10, 2012, 01:22:08 PM »
i just found some information on silver bromide...

it is a white-light yellow (sometimes colourless) sediment,
when melting this sediment it reacts to a red-brown liquid.

maybe thats it?

but what is this red-brown liquid? it must be something different, not silver bromide.
silber bromide may be the colourless sediment..

complicated...  :-\

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