In gravimetry, the precipitant is chosen carefully to obtain a pure solid that can be easily filtered. Common inorganic precipitants can be used to determine several cations and anions. In some cases, the formation of the same precipitate can be used to determine the cation and the anion. For example, the reaction of barium and chromate ions to give barium chromate is used to determine both barium and chromate. However, precipitates such as hydroxides, oxalates, and metal ammonium phosphates are first converted to a weighable form. Precipitation methods can also be applied to determine organic functional groups such as organic halides, carbonyl, alkoxy groups, aromatic nitro, azo, and phosphate.

Organic precipitants are usually more selective than their inorganic counterparts and yield sparingly soluble precipitates with high molecular masses. A small number of analyte ions will yield a large amount of precipitate. For example, sodium tetraphenylborate is a near-specific precipitant for potassium and ammonium ions, yielding ionic precipitates. Several organic precipitants contain multiple functional groups that can bond with the cation to generate five- or six-membered rings called chelates. Typical chelating agents include 8-hydroxyquinoline and cupferron.

Tags
GravimetryInorganic PrecipitantsOrganic PrecipitantsPrecipitation MethodsCationsAnionsBarium ChromateHydroxidesOxalatesChelating AgentsSodium TetraphenylborateFunctional GroupsSparingly Soluble PrecipitatesChelates

Du chapitre 5:

article

Now Playing

5.16 : Gravimetry: Inorganic And Organic Precipitating Agents

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

905 Vues

article

5.1 : Titrage complexométrique : Vue d’ensemble

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

3.9K Vues

article

5.2 : Titrage complexométrique : ligands

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

732 Vues

article

5.3 : Propriétés des composés organométalliques

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

705 Vues

article

5.4 : EDTA : Chimie et propriétés

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

1.4K Vues

article

5.5 : EDTA : Constante de Formation Conditionnelle

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

528 Vues

article

5.6 : EDTA : réactifs complexants auxiliaires

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

440 Vues

article

5.7 : EDTA : titrage direct, arrière et déplacement

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

1.7K Vues

article

5.8 : EDTA : titrage indirect et alcalinmétrique

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

532 Vues

article

5.9 : Courbes de titrage EDTA complexométriques

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

620 Vues

article

5.10 : Effets de l’EDTA sur les méthodes de détection des points finaux

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

187 Vues

article

5.11 : Masquage et démasquage des agents

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

1.9K Vues

article

5.12 : Titrage des précipitations : Vue d’ensemble

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

3.6K Vues

article

5.13 : Courbe de titrage des précipitations : analyse

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

772 Vues

article

5.14 : Titrage des précipitations : méthodes de détection des points finaux

Complexometric Titration, Precipitation Titration, and Gravimetry

1.1K Vues

See More

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.