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BY
AMRUTH SHRI S NAIR
10A
INDEX
S.No: TOPIC Pg.no:
| LABORATORYPREPARATIONS 1
1. Hydrogen chloride gas 2-5
2. Hydrochloric acid 6-8
3. Nitric acid 9-11
4. Ammonia 12-15
|| MANUFACTURUNG METHOD 16
Laboratory preparation
. 2.
Preparationofhydrogenchloridegasfromcommonsalt
3.
.LABORATORY PREPARATION OF HYDROGEN CHLORIDE GAS
In the laboratory, hydrogen chloride gas can be prepared by the
action of concentrated sulphuric acid on sodium chloride.
Reaction:
<200°C
NaCl+H₂SO₄-------------NaHSO₄ + HCI↑
4.
The reaction can occur upto the stage of formation of sodium
sulphate on heating above 200°C.
>200°C
NaHSO₄ + NaCl----------- Na₂SO4 ₄+ HCI↑
Or
>200°C
2NaCl+H₂SO₄------------Na₂SO₄ + 2HCI
(Conc.)
Note:
(i) Sodium chloride is cheap and therefore it is preferred for
preparation of HCl over other metal chlorides.
(ii)Conc. Nitric acid is not used during the preparation of HCI because
it is volatile and may volatilize out alongwith hydrogen chloride.
Precautions :
(a)The lower end of the thistle funnel must be dipped in conc.
Sulphuric acid.
(b)Delivery tube should be dipped in drying agent i.e., conc. H₂SO₄
(c) temparature maintained at nearly 200°C
7.
.8.
.
Mechanism by which back suction is avoided or minimized
The funnel arrangement –
Reaction:
2NH₃Cl + Ca(OH)₂→ CaCl₂ + 2H₂O + 2NH₃↑
Collection:
Ammonia gas is collected in inverted gas jars by the downward
displacement of air because it is:
(i) Lighter than air (V.D. of NH₃ 8.5; that of air,14.4).
(ii) Highly soluble in water and therefore, it cannotbe collected
over water.
Note:
1. Higher ratio by weight of the alkali is used it may
counteract the loss by sublimation of NH₄Cl.
2. Calcium hydroxide is used, as it is cheap and not
deliquescent like other alkalies.
3. Though all ammonium salts, on heating with alkalies give
NH₃, yet NH₄NO₃ (explosive in nature) and NH₄NO₂on
warming with alkalies do not produce ammonia because
they decompose on heating.
15.
ꕔ
NH₄NO₃ ----N₂O+ 2H₂O
ꕔ
NH₄NO₂----N₂+2H₂O
(2)From metal nitrides
Ammonia can also be obtained by the actionof warm water on
nitrides of metals like magnesium or Aluminium. (This method is
costly)
Reaction:
Mg₃N₂+6H₂O-- 3Mg(OH)₂+ 2NH₃↑
Or
AIN+3H₂O AI(OH)₃+ NH₃↑
MANUFACTURING METHOD
17.
The hot gases are then passed through a heat exchanger (cooling
chamber), and then they are mixed with air and passed into another
chamber called oxidising chamber.
19.
Step II: Oxidation of nitric oxide in oxidation chamber
Pure 100% nitric acid is obtained by strongly cooling the 98% acid,
when colourless crystals of pure nitric acid get separated at – 42°C.
(i) Higher ratio of air is used because oxygen is only 1/5th in air
and it is required in all the three chambers.
Sources of reactants :
Reaction :
Favourable conditions:
Process: Nitrogen and hydrogen are dried, purified and then mixed in
the ratio of 1: 3 respectively, at a relatively high pressure. This
mixture is passed in an electrically heated catalytic chamber
containing finely divided iron with aluminium oxide or a little amount
of molybdenum at a temperature of 500°C. Mixture of ammonia
formed along with residual nitrogen and hydrogen exchanges their
heat with the incoming unreacted nitrogen and hydrogen mixture.
27.
The hot mixture of the outgoing gases contains nearly 15% ammonia.
The mixture is passed through the cooling pipes (condenser).
IDENTIFICATION TESTS
30.
TESTS FOR SULPHURIC ACID AND SULPHATES
K₂Cr₂O₇+H₂SO₄+3SO₂→Cr2(SO₄)3+K₂SO₄+ H₂O
(Orange). (Green)
HCl gas gives dense white fumes of ammonium chloride, with a glass
rod dipped in ammonium hydroxide.
(3)With silver nitrate solution, both the gas and the acid give a
white precipitate of silver chloride.
© When the gas is passed through the lime water, it turns milky due
to the formation of white precipitate of calcium carbonate.