An Introductory Course of Quantitative Chemical Analysis Part 25
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91. If 0.6742 gram of a mixture of pure magnesium carbonate and pure calcium carbonate, when treated with an excess of hydrochloric acid, yields 0.3117 gram of carbon dioxide, calculate the percentage of magnesium oxide and of calcium oxide in the sample.
!Answers!: 13.22% MgO; 40.54% CaO. 92. The calcium in a sample of dolomite weighing 0.9380 gram is precipitated as calcium oxalate and ignited to calcium oxide. What volume of gas, measured over water at 20C. and 765 mm. pressure, is given off during ignition, if the resulting oxide weighs 0.2606 gram? (G.M.V. = 22.4 liters; V.P. water at 20C. = 17.4 mm.)
!Answer!: 227 cc.
93. A limestone is found to contain 93.05% CaCO_{3}, and 5.16 % MgCO_{3}. Calculate the weight of CaO obtainable from 3 tons of the limestone, a.s.suming complete conversion to oxide. What weight of Mg_{2}P_{2}O_{7} could be obtained from a 3-gram sample of the limestone?
!Answers!: 1.565 tons; 0.2044 gram.
94. A sample of dolomite is a.n.a.lyzed for calcium by precipitating as the oxalate and igniting the precipitate. The ignited product is a.s.sumed to be CaO and the a.n.a.lyst reports 29.50% Ca in the sample.
Owing to insufficient ignition, the product actually contained 8% of its weight of CaCO_{3}. What is the correct percentage of calcium in the sample, and what is the percentage error?
!Answers!: 28.46%; 3.65% error.
95. What weight of impure calcite (CaCO_{3}) should be taken for a.n.a.lysis so that the volume in cubic centimeters of CO_{2} obtained by treating with acid, measured dry at 18C. and 763 mm., shall equal the percentage of CaO in the sample?
!Answer!: 0.2359 gram.
96. How many cubic centimeters of HNO_{3} (sp. gr. 1.13 containing 21.0% HNO_{3} by weight) are required to dissolve 5 grams of bra.s.s, containing 0.61% Pb, 24.39% Zn, and 75% Cu, a.s.suming reduction of the nitric acid to NO by each const.i.tuent? What fraction of this volume of acid is used for oxidation?
!Answers!: 55.06 cc.; 25%.
97. What weight of metallic copper will be deposited from a cupric salt solution by a current of 1.5 amperes during a period of 45 minutes, a.s.suming 100% current efficiency? (1 Faraday = 96,500 coulombs.)
!Answer!: 1.335 grams.
98. In the electrolysis of a 0.8000 gram sample of bra.s.s, there is obtained 0.0030 gram of PbO_{2}, and a deposit of metallic copper exactly equal in weight to the ignited precipitate of Zn_{2}P_{2}O_{7} subsequently obtained from the solution. What is the percentage composition of the bra.s.s?
!Answers!: 69.75% Cu; 29.92% Zn; 0.33% Pb.
99. A sample of bra.s.s (68.90% Cu; 1.10% Pb and 30.00% Zn) weighing 0.9400 gram is dissolved in nitric acid. The lead is determined by weighing as PbSO_{4}, the copper by electrolysis and the zinc by precipitation with (NH_{4})_{2}HPO_{4} in a neutral solution.
(a) Calculate the cubic centimeters of nitric acid (sp. gr. 1.42 containing 69.90% HNO_{3} by weight) required to just dissolve the bra.s.s, a.s.suming reduction to NO.
!Answer!: 2.48 cc.
(b) Calculate the cubic centimeters of sulphuric acid (sp. gr. 1.84 containing 94% H_{2}SO_{4} by weight) to displace the nitric acid.
!Answer!: 0.83 cc.
(c) Calculate the weight of PbSO_{4}.
!Answer!: 0.0152 gram.
(d) The clean electrode weighs 10.9640 grams. Calculate the weight after the copper has been deposited.
!Answer!: 11.6116 grams.
(e) Calculate the grams of (NH_{4})_{2}HPO_{4} required to precipitate the zinc as ZnNH_{4}PO_{4}.
!Answer!: 0.5705 gram.
(f) Calculate the weight of ignited Zn_{2}P_{2}O_{7}.
!Answer!: 0.6573 gram.
100. If in the a.n.a.lysis of a bra.s.s containing 28.00% zinc an error is made in weighing a 2.5 gram portion by which 0.001 gram too much is weighed out, what percentage error in the zinc determination would result? What volume of a solution of sodium hydrogen phosphate, containing 90 grams of Na_{2}HPO_{4}.12H_{2}O per liter, would be required to precipitate the zinc as ZnNH_{4}PO_{4} and what weight of precipitate would be obtained?
!Answers!: (a) 0.04% error; (b) 39.97 cc.; (c) 1.909 grams.
101. A sample of magnesium carbonate, contaminated with SiO_{2} as its only impurity, weighs 0.5000 gram and loses 0.1000 gram on ignition.
What volume of disodium phosphate solution (containing 90 grams Na_{2}HPO_{4}.12H_{2}O per liter) will be required to precipitate the magnesium as magnesium ammonium phosphate?
!Answer!: 9.07 cc.
102. 2.62 cubic centimeters of nitric acid (sp. gr. 1.42 containing 69.80% HNO_{2} by weight) are required to just dissolve a sample of bra.s.s containing 69.27% Cu; 0.05% Pb; 0.07% Fe; and 30.61% Zn.
a.s.suming the acid used as oxidizing agent was reduced to NO in every case, calculate the weight of the bra.s.s and the cubic centimeters of acid used as acid.
!Answer!: 0.992 gram; 1.97 cc.
103. One gram of a mixture of silver chloride and silver bromide is found to contain 0.6635 gram of silver. What is the percentage of bromine?
!Answer!: 21.30%.
104. A precipitate of silver chloride and silver bromide weighs 0.8132 gram. On heating in a current of chlorine, the silver bromide is converted to silver chloride, and the mixture loses 0.1450 gram in weight. Calculate the percentage of chlorine in the original precipitate.
!Answer!: 6.13%.
105. A sample of feldspar weighing 1.000 gram is fused and the silica determined. The weight of silica is 0.6460 gram. This is fused with 4 grams of sodium carbonate. How many grams of the carbonate actually combined with the silica in fusion, and what was the loss in weight due to carbon dioxide during the fusion?
!Answers!: 1.135 grams; 0.4715 gram.
106. A mixture of barium oxide and calcium oxide weighing 2.2120 grams is transformed into mixed sulphates, weighing 5.023 grams. Calculate the grams of calcium oxide and barium oxide in the mixture.
!Answers!: 1.824 grams CaO; 0.3877 gram BaO.
APPENDIX
ELECTROLYTIC DISSOCIATION THEORY
The following brief statements concerning the ionic theory and a few of its applications are intended for reference in connection with the explanations which are given in the Notes accompanying the various procedures. The reader who desires a more extended discussion of the fundamental theory and its uses is referred to such books as Talbot and Blanchard's !Electrolytic Dissociation Theory! (Macmillan Company), or Alexander Smith's !Introduction to General Inorganic Chemistry! (Century Company).
The !electrolytic dissociation theory!, as propounded by Arrhenius in 1887, a.s.sumes that acids, bases, and salts (that is, electrolytes) in aqueous solution are dissociated to a greater or less extent into !ions!. These ions are a.s.sumed to be electrically charged atoms or groups of atoms, as, for example, H^{+} and Br^{-} from hydrobromic acid, Na^{+} and OH^{-} from sodium hydroxide, 2NH_{4}^{+} and SO_{4}^{--} from ammonium sulphate. The unit charge is that which is dissociated with a hydrogen ion. Those upon other ions vary in sign and number according to the chemical character and valence of the atoms or radicals of which the ions are composed. In any solution the aggregate of the positive charges upon the positive ions (!cations!) must always balance the aggregate negative charges upon the negative ions (!anions!).
An Introductory Course of Quantitative Chemical Analysis Part 25
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