I second that.Bokky said:for the lead ion determination i said add iodide ions to the sample of water suspected of containing lead. if a yellow precipitate (PbI2) forms then lead ions are present in the solution
you're forgetting the very first multiple choice question, lol100percent said:i'm disappointed there was no radio isotopes in it. but i think i did as good as i can expect, so i'm happy.
It's actually KI. Pb reacts with KI to form yellow PbI(sub)2 precipitate.~ ReNcH ~ said:AAS would be to test the concentration of lead ions once it is known that there are lead ions present, and the question addressed the latter. I just said to add NaOH, producing a white precipitate of Pb(OH)2 in the presence of lead...hopefully it's correct.
*cough*ocugh* i nearly choked on my food wen i read that. i wrote exactly the same thing except i made it up on the spot. i never studied the solubilty table or precipitation reactions. go me! lolBokky said:for the lead ion determination i said add iodide ions to the sample of water suspected of containing lead. if a yellow precipitate (PbI2) forms then lead ions are present in the solution
there is a heap of possibilities to test 4 lead. its from the cations flow chart in chem contexts 2 for any of u who have it. i had add dilute HCl then dilute NH3 to a secind sample to confirm its lead. but thats just one option. AAS is definalty notJust James said:It's actually KI. Pb reacts with KI to form yellow PbI(sub)2 precipitate.
Aligning and scaling are two separate procedures. Just because an exam is easy doesn't mean that its scaling will be low. Scaling is determined by how people in chemistry go in all of their other exams...If everyone who did chem did well in their other exams, then chem will still have great scalingyes...but said:a simple, straight forward chemistry exam - straight from the syllabus. raw marks will be high - will bring scaling down - way down
for that i remembered dreamerish's thread on water quality. first u acidify the water, by adding HCl. then add Na2S, and a yellow precipitate would form if Pb is presentpunki_pixi said:oh no.. its coming back to me now but i could never remember those tests. I said to add HCl and PbCl2 ppt would form but I didn't think it would be right. I got desperate and wrote that if its in trace amounts AAS would be needed... lol thats 2 marks gone.