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A student has a sample of a solid dissolved in a liquid. The task is to separate the mixture into its pure components. What question is best asked in the design of the experiment to determine how to separate the components?

2 Answers

1 vote

Answer:

When two or more substances, that do not react chemically, are blended together,

the result is a mixture in which each component retains its individual identity and

properties.

The separation of the components of a mixture is a problem frequently encountered

in chemistry. The basis of the separation is the fact that each component has a

different set of physical and chemical properties. The components are pure substances

which are either elements or compounds. Under the same conditions of pressure and

temperature, the properties of every sample of a pure substance are identical. Each

sample melts at the same temperature, boils at the same temperature, has the same

solubility in a given solvent, etc.

Although these and other characteristics can be used to identify a particular

substance, we will be concerned, in this experiment, with the separation of a mixture

into its components, not with the identification of the substances. Techniques used to

separate mixtures rely on differences in the physical properties of the components.

Techniques useful for the separation of mixtures include the following:

DISTILLATION is the purification of a liquid by heating it to its boiling point, causing

vaporization, and then condensing the vapors into the liquid state and collecting the

liquid. Separation of two or more liquids requires that they have different boiling

temperatures. All boiling temperatures can be reduced by decreasing the pressure

on the liquid.

EXTRACTION is the removal of one substance from a mixture because of its

greater solubility in a given solvent.

FILTRATION is the process of removing or "straining" a solid (the chemical term is

precipitate) from a liquid by the use of filter paper or other porous material.

DECANTING is the pouring of a liquid from a solid-liquid mixture, leaving the solid

behind.

CENTRIFUGING is the process of separating a suspended solid from a liquid by

whirling the mixture at high speed.

SUBLIMATION is the physical property of some substances to pass directly from

the solid state to the gaseous state without the appearance of the liquid state. Not

all substances possess this characteristic. If one component of a mixture

sublimates, this property may be used to separate it from the other components of

the mixture. Iodine (I2), naphthalene (C10H8, mothballs), ammonium chloride

(NH4Cl) and dry ice (solid CO2) are some substances which sublime.

CHROMATOGRAPHY is the process of separating a mixture by the distribution of

its components between two phases, one phase being stationary and the other

phase moving. Some examples of chromatography are gas chromatography, paper

chromatography, and thin-layer chromatography.

User Joecks
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5 votes

Answer:

Will the Solvent evaporate at a different temperature than the solute in a distillation procedure

Step-by-step explanation:

It’s the right question to ask

User Ludonope
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