Dear All,
Thanks for your input. CaF2 is almost insoluble in water, 0.0015g/100 mL (20 °C).
For the 0.0015g that is soluble, can this be reacted by double displacement with a soluble compound that is above Calcium in the electrochemical series, ( eg. Na2CO3 ) so as to precipitate the Calcium as another insoluble salt such as CaCO3 ? Meaning, the reaction rate will be slow, but the equilibrium shifts to the right :
CaF2(s) + Na2CO3(aq)
CaCO3(s)
+ 2NaF(aq)
insoluble soluble insoluble soluble
As the CaCO3 is removed from solution, more CaF2 ionizes ( CaF is ionically bonded ) and goes into solution, reacting with the Na2CO3, thus shifting equilibrium to the right.
The ionic bonding of NaF is more stronger and stable than that of Na2CO3, again favouring formation of NaF. Is this explanation plausible ?