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6 min read•june 18, 2024
Dalia Savy
Kanya Shah
Dalia Savy
Kanya Shah
When dealing with solutions, you will have a solute (or multiple solutes) dissolved in a solvent. Many times, a chemist will need to separate these solutions, especially after a chemical reaction has taken place. You might even have to go through some of these separation techniques in the lab! 🧪
There are many methods to separate solutes from their solvent based on physical properties and differences in their intermolecular forces.
Evaporation is a process by which a solvent is boiled and thus evaporated in order to separate out the solute. For example, if you boil salt water🌊 long enough, you will be left with a small amount of salt🧂 at the bottom of your pot.
The same idea applies to essentially any solution with a solid, soluble solute. Evaporation is the simplest kind of separation and is often the one most students have the most experience with and understand the easiest. Essentially, just boil the liquid away!
☕ A good real-life example of filtration is when making coffee, you pour the mixture of coffee beans and hot water through a coffee filter to let the coffee run through into your mug, but the ground coffee beans stay behind.
Only insoluble substances will be filtered with filtration. The filtrate would then be both salt and water, or salt water. Therefore, filtration isn't effective if you want to fully separate all of these elements. After filtering the sand out, you would have to evaporate the salt water solution to separate the salt.
Chromatography is a technique that separates chemical species based on their interaction with a stationary phase, which is typically a solid surface or a liquid. There are several types of chromatography, including paper chromatography, thin-layer chromatography, and column chromatography. Each of these techniques has its own specific set of advantages and disadvantages, and they are all used for different purposes depending on the characteristics of the sample being analyzed.
Paper chromatography is a simple and cost-effective technique that is commonly used to separate and identify compounds in a sample. In this technique, a small amount of the sample is applied to a strip of chromatography paper, which is then placed in a solvent. The solvent moves up the paper by capillary action, and the compounds in the sample are carried along with it. As the solvent moves up the paper, the compounds in the sample interact differently with the paper, resulting in different rates of movement. This allows the compounds to be separated based on their affinity for the paper.
The stationary phase in paper chromatography is typically a cellulose material, which is polar in nature. As a result, polar compounds in the sample will have a greater affinity for the cellulose paper, while non-polar compounds will have a weaker affinity. This leads to the separation of the compounds based on their polarity, with polar compounds moving more slowly up the paper and non-polar compounds moving more quickly.
** Remember: Like dissolves like with polarity! **
Most TLC plates are made up of polar silica, which you can think of as a very small powder. This silica is considered the stationary phase, while the solvent in the TLC chamber is considered the mobile phase. A general rule of thumb is that polar compounds are more strongly attracted to the stationary phase, and will move less, while nonpolar compounds are more readily eluted with the solvent. This is very similar to paper chromatography, but here, the stationary phase is silica, not a cellulose material.
Column chromatography is less tested on the AP compared to TLC and paper chromatography, but it is still included on the AP Chemistry Course and Exam Description provided by College Board!
It is a technique that separates chemical species based on their interaction with a stationary phase, like the other types of chromatography. The difference is that the stationary phase is packed into a column, hence its name!
With column chromatography, the stationary phase is typically silica or alumina, which are both small sold materials. As the compounds pass through the column, they interact with the stationary phase, which results in different rates of movement. This, again, allows the compounds to be separated based on their affinity for the stationary phase.
This technique is more complex and takes more time than the other two, but it allows for the separation of large quantities of a sample and can achieve higher purity of separated components.
Distillation, like chromatography, is used to separate solutions of liquids. With distillation, the fact that different liquids have different boiling points is taken advantage of. Through distillation, a solution is carefully heated such that only one liquid boils out and then recondenses into another beaker. The first liquid to boil is the one with the weakest IMFs and the strength of IMFs increases as the boiling point increases.
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