Answer:
A) 4.06 mg
B) Use an analytical balance to weigh out the amount of reagent determined in part A. Transfer the reagent to a 50.0 mL volumetric flask, add water to the line, and mix thoroughly.
Step-by-step explanation:
A) When the calcium hypochlorite is added to the water, it will dissolve, and will produce the hypochlorite ion by the reaction:
Ca(OCl)₂(s) → Ca⁺²(aq) + 2OCl⁻(aq)
Thus, 1 mol of Ca(OCl)₂(s) produces 2 moles of OCl⁻.
The concentration of the solution is 55.0 ppm, which means that there are 55.0g of OCl⁻ per 1,000,000 g of the solution, thus, if we multiply this by the density of the solution (1.00 g/mL), we will have the concentration by w/v (weight per volume) of the hypochlorite:
55.0 g of OCl⁻/1,000,000 *1 g/mL
5.5x10⁻⁵ g OCl⁻/mL
Thus, the mass of the OCl⁻ presented in 50.0 mL of the solution is 2.75x10⁻³ g (5.5x10⁻⁵ g OCl⁻/mL * 50 mL). The number of moles of the substance is the mass divided by its molar mass:
nOCl⁻ = 2.75x10⁻³/51.452
nOCl⁻ = 5.345x10⁻⁵ mol
So, if 2 moles of OCl⁻ is provided by 1 mol of Ca(OCl)₂, then, the number of moles needed is half of the number of moles of the ion:
nCa(OCl)₂ = 5.345x10⁻⁵/2
nCa(OCl)₂ = 2.67x10⁻⁵ mol
The mass necessary of it is the number of moles multiplied by its molar mass:
m = 2.67x10⁻⁵ * 142.983
m = 3.82x10⁻³ g
m = 3.82 mg
Because the reagent is impure, the mass needed will be higher, because only the Ca(OCl)₂ will react. The purity is the mas off the reagent divided by the total mass:
3.82/M = 0.94
0.94M = 3.82
M = 4.06 mg
B) To best prepare, the solution, the mass calculated of the reactant must be weighed out in an analytical balance, because in this balance the error value is low (it has 5 decimal figures). Then, the reagent must be put in a 50.0 mL flask, because it's the solution volume we want, and in the volumetric flask, the volume is trustworthy. Then, the water is added until the line, which represents the total volume (50.0 mL).
When this exact mass is added to this volume, the solution must be mixed until it becomes homogenous. When it happens, the reagent dissociates in the ion OCl⁻, and the steps taken in part A occur in inverse order, given the most accurate concentration.