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Topic: Ionic reactions and counterions  (Read 2394 times)

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Offline mikachu

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Ionic reactions and counterions
« on: October 11, 2013, 09:20:19 PM »
Hello all!

I did an experiment in the lab today which was titled "The Independence of an ionic reaction from a counter ion" (I hope this makes sense, I translated it from German).  I'm having a lot of trouble formulating the chemical equations and understanding the importance of this experiment.

Experiment 1:
1.  Add 1ml of CHCl3 with one patty of solid NaOH to 1ml of distilled water.
2.  Heat for about 1min.
3.  Let cool, then add enough 2N HNO3 until the test tube is half way filled.
4.  Mix well.
5.  To this you now add a few drops of AgNO3 solution.

Experiment 2:
Repeat experiment 1, but add distilled water instead of HNO3.

Experiment 1 produces a white fallout (AgCl)
Experimnet 2 produces first a black fallout (AgOH) and then a brown fallout (Ag2O)

So far I've got:

CHCl3 + NaOH  ::equil::  NaCl + CCl2 + H2O

but I have no idea how to proceed or why the HNO3 is necessary  :(

I guess next I would have to add HNO3 into the equation, but how do I predict the products and how do I end up getting AgCl?
Also does the heat play a role other than dissovling the NaOH faster?

Any help would be much appreciated! Thanks!
« Last Edit: October 11, 2013, 10:28:22 PM by mikachu »

Offline Archer

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Re: Ionic reactions and counterions
« Reply #1 on: October 12, 2013, 02:05:54 AM »
I am not sure that this reaction goes as far as the dichlorocarbene.

 CHCl3 + NaOH  :rarrow: NaCl + :CCl2 + H2O

The :CCl2 is extremely reactive and doesn't hang around for long, their chemistry is a bit advanced for high school.

It might be that the CHCl3 is just deprotonated to (CCl3)- Na+.
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Offline Archer

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Re: Ionic reactions and counterions
« Reply #2 on: October 12, 2013, 03:15:45 AM »
I am not sure that this reaction goes as far as the dichlorocarbene.

 CHCl3 + NaOH  :rarrow: NaCl + :CCl2 + H2O

The :CCl2 is extremely reactive and doesn't hang around for long, their chemistry is a bit advanced for high school.

It might be that the CHCl3 is just deprotonated to (CCl3)- Na+.


Upon thinking about this I am not so sure about this reaction. I think perhaps the chloroform is hydrolysed to sodium formate in the first step.
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Offline magician4

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Re: Ionic reactions and counterions
« Reply #3 on: October 12, 2013, 11:02:37 AM »
@ archer:
Quote
I am not sure that this reaction goes as far as the dichlorocarbene.
IMHO, this is the classical approach to dichlorcarbene (under PTC-conditions, if memory serves), and still is in use in labs today, and that's why the experiment as described worries me a bit...
... as - if my imagination of "boiling ..." was true- the test tube should have contained dichlorcarbene, which, upon contact with oxygen/air, will form phosgene instantaneously, which is kind of voilatile (at least the fraction that is not subsequently hydrolyzed to carbonate, i.e. can escape before hydrolysis)...

to boil stiff NaOH , aq. with CHCl3  :rarrow: bad, bad idea


@ all:


asides from this, there are many alternative, much safer ways to produce chloride as product of a nucleophilic reaction (t. butylchloride / NaOH aq. comes to mind), and I don't see the point in doing it in a way as reported, i.e with a very very veeeeery poisenous gas as byproduct, just for the trivial purpose of having chloride around...

last not least, the whole title question seems kind of unrelated / contradicting to the experiment, as this experiment shows the dependency of a ionic reaction (i.e. formation of either AgCl or AgOH / Ag2O , depending on OH- or Cl- running the show) , and not the independency instead.


might this be an error in translation ?


regards

Ingo
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