Inorganic Prac 2
Inorganic Prac 2
The easiest way to view this is that ethanol dissolves in water and because of
the lower solubility of the complex in the new solvent, an ethanol-water
mixture, the complex then crystallizes. It is indirectly due to polarity, but
directly due to solubility.
produce the highest absorbance read out on the colorimeter and as a result
the formula of the complex can be verified.
(NH3) to copper (II) sulfate pentahydrate which will displace the water
molecules bound in the
original copper complex, and a dramatic color change occurs.
The reaction of ammonia with the copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate is a twostep process. In the
first step, solid copper (II) hydroxide is formed which is light blue in color. The
Cu(OH)2(s)
dissolves as additional quantities of ammonia are added in the second step to
form the dark blue
[Cu(NH3)4]2+
complex. The equations for the process are below
Reaction 1:
[Cu(H2O)4]SO4H2O (aq) + 2NH3 (aq) Cu (H2O)2(OH)2]SO4 H2O (s)
+2 NH4
+
(aq)
Reaction 2:
Cu (H2O)2(OH)2]SO4 H2O (s) + 2 NH4
+
(aq) + 2 NH3 (aq) [Cu(NH3)4] SO4H2O (aq) + 4 H2O (l)
The overall net equation for the reaction is
Cu(H2O)4]SO4H2O (aq) + 4 NH3 (aq) [Cu(NH3)4]SO4H2O + +4 H2O
(l)
The copper(II) ammonia complex is water-soluble. In order to precipitate and
isolate the final
product, you need to decrease the solubility of the ionic compound. A
convenient way of doing
this is to add a large amount of ethanol, CH3CH2OH, to the aqueous solution.
Ethanol is much
less polar than water, and as the amount of ethanol in the mixture increases,
the solubility of ionic
compounds decreases. After the addition of ethanol, your coordination
compound will appear as
a crystalline solid. The synthesis procedure ends with filtration, rinsing, and
drying of the product.