Bush Elephant
New Member
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2005
- Messages
- 7
*cries* studies so hard for chem and hardly anything was in it .. no CFC's etc.... o well.. bio was easy, chem not to bad....physics *shudders* i am hoping 2 be easy.. but aren't we all lol
So if I said you add HCl and looked for a ppt if lead was present do you think that would earn at least one mark?AreYouAlright? said:For lead you definitely needed a confirmatory test, so i simply tested with HCl in which it forms a white ppt and confirmed with I- in which it forms a yellow ppt.
Yeh i hated having to remember tests for cations and anions.Mz_mE said:could u have said aas to test for lead?
Considering the question asked for a "test" (no plural), how can students be expected to perform both an initial and a confirmatory test? - this, to me, implies the need for two tests, not one.alia said:Yeh i hated having to remember tests for cations and anions.
My teacher is a HSC marker for like 20 yrs or something and they are very specific about those.
You have to have an initial test and a confirming test. You have to have the amounts and maybe the concentrations. You HAVE to say what you are puting them in e.g. test tube. and you have to state "if there is a yellow ppt then Pb is present if there is no ppt then Pb is not present"
I put add 1ml HCL in test tube (0.1mol/L) to 1ml of the sample, if there is no white ppt then no Pb2+ is present. if white ppt, then add NaI 1ml 0.1mol/L. If a yellow ppt forms then Pb2+ is present if no yellow ppt forms then no Pb2+ is in sample
Adding hydroxide ions also produces a white precipitate.Just James said:It's actually KI. Pb reacts with KI to form yellow PbI(sub)2 precipitate.
~ ReNcH ~ said:Adding hydroxide ions also produces a white precipitate.
Yes... the big square one is the lead-battery. Although I thought giving us pictures doesnt do justice to people who know their batteries but not neccessarily recognising the pictures.Captain Gh3y said:lol, yeah.
Oh, was the Lead Acid Cell the big square one, or the little round one? Fuck I hope it was the big square one; I have absolutely no idea about the batteries, and I pretty much made it up using the std. potential reactions with Lead and MnO4, lol.
Yes well they are two separate tests but you need to have both of them to confirm it.~ ReNcH ~ said:Considering the question asked for a "test" (no plural), how can students be expected to perform both an initial and a confirmatory test? - this, to me, implies the need for two tests, not one.
"It is suspected that lead has contaminated the creek. Describe a CHEMICAL test that could be carried out on the water sample to determine the presence of lead" (2marks)Dumsum said:What's wrong with AAS for a lead test? Since you're only checking the spectrum that corresponds to lead. I was thinking if the lead concentration was uber small (which for some reason I got from the wording of the question...does anyone remember it exactly? has someone already posted it?) then no precipitate would be noticeable.