Teaching AS Chemistry Practical Skills
Teaching AS Chemistry Practical Skills
Teaching AS Chemistry Practical Skills
Practical Skills
Your attention is drawn to the Risk Assessment section on page 15 of the Introduction
to this booklet, and to the hazards indicated in Appendices 1 and 2. While every effort
has been made to ensure that appropriate safety indications are given, CIE accepts no
responsibility for the safety of these experiments and it is the responsibility of the
teacher to carry out a full risk assessment for each experiment undertaken, in
accordance with local rules and regulations. Hazard data sheets should be available
from your suppliers.
Acknowledgements
Thanks are due to Chris Conoley and Brian Hildick for writing this booklet.
Contents
Introduction 1
Why should I read this booklet? 1
How much teaching time should I allocate to practical work? 1
Can I use the practicals in these booklets in a different order? 1
What resources will I need? 2
Is there a limit to the class size? 2
Why should I teach my students practical skills? 2
Points to consider 2
What are the practical skills required by this course? 3
Summary of each of the seven skills 5
Ways of doing practical work 8
Keeping records 12
How is a practical activity organised? 13
Risk assessment 15
Eye protection 16
AS skills 18
Teaching students to manipulate apparatus 18
Teaching students to make observations and measurements 18
Teaching students to record and present data and observations 19
Teaching students to analyse data and draw conclusions 20
Teaching students to evaluate procedures 21
Designing a practical course for the AS year 22
Appendix 1 − Suggested AS level practical course 23
Appendix 2 − Detailed practical lessons 39
1. Making salt – an introduction to some basic techniques 39
3. How much iron is there in an iron tablet? 45
5. What is the volume of 1 mole of hydrogen gas? 49
8. Measuring the enthalpy changes of exothermic and endothermic reactions 52
12. The effect of altering the concentration on an equilibrium reaction 57
13. Determining the value of Kc for an equilibrium reaction 61
15. The effect of temperature on reaction rate 67
21. Some redox reactions of halogens and halides 72
25. Cracking hydrocarbons 77
28. Some reactions of alcohols 81
Introduction
You may have been teaching AS and A level chemistry for many years or this may be a new
experience. In either case, you will be keen to ensure that you prepare your students as
effectively as possible for their examinations. Using a well-structured scheme of practical
work will certainly help you to achieve this, but it can do so much more. Scientists who are
thoroughly trained and experienced in practical skills will have a ‘feel’ for the subject and be
much more confident in their own abilities than those with a purely theoretical background.
While it is true that there are branches of chemistry that could be described as purely
theoretical, these are in the minority. Essentially, chemistry is a practical subject and we owe
it to our students to ensure that those who pursue science further have the necessary basic
practical skills to take forward into their future careers. Furthermore, the basic skills of
planning, analysis and evaluation will be of great value to those who pursue non-scientific
careers.
Some of you may be wondering why you need a booklet like this. If you have highly
developed practical skills and you feel confident teaching these skills to others, you probably
don’t, but you might find some of the exercises described in the appendices useful. However,
most of us appreciate a little help and support. This booklet aims to provide at least some of
this support.
It is designed for the teacher rather than for the student. Its objective is to provide a
framework within which your practical skills can develop and grow. Experience shows that as
the teacher’s practical skills develop, their confidence in teaching such skills increases, as
does the amount of time that they will be prepared to spend on teaching practical work.
The syllabus stipulates that 20% of teaching time should be allocated to practical work. This
is in addition to any time you choose to spend on practical demonstrations to illustrate the
theory syllabus. This emphasis on practical work is not misplaced. Consider the weighting
given to assessment objectives in the syllabus: 24% of the award is allocated to experimental
skills and investigations and 30% is allocated to handling, applying and evaluating
information. Taken together, almost 55% of the total award is related to the student’s ability
to interpret data, understand how it has been obtained, recognise limitations and suggest
explanations. All of these objectives lend themselves to investigative work involving practical
experience. Even if you consider the specific practical papers in isolation, they still represent
23% of the AS or 24% of the A2 award.
In planning a curriculum, you should therefore expect to build in time for developing practical
skills. If, for example, the total time allowed for this syllabus is 5 hours per week over 35
weeks, then a minimum of 1 hour per week should be built into the plan for practical work, so
that over the year a minimum of 35 hours is made available − 20% of the total. Bearing in
mind the emphasis on assessment objectives that relate to information handling and problem
solving, a minimum of 2 hours per week might be more appropriate, which at 40% of the total
time is still less than the overall weighting for these assessment objectives.
It is assumed that for A level candidates, the AS work will be taught in the first year of the
course and the A2 work will be covered in the second year. If you take this linear A level
assessment route, you need to give careful consideration to the order in which you use the
practical exercises, as the skills practised in these booklets are hierarchical in nature, i.e. the
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basic skills established in the AS booklet are extended and developed in the A2 booklet.
Thus, students will need to have practised basic skills from the AS exercises before using
these skills to tackle more demanding A2 exercises.
The exercises in the booklets are given in syllabus order. You may, of course, decide to use
a different teaching sequence, but the above point regarding AS/A2 exercises still applies.
A list of the basic resources required for assessment can be found in the syllabus. A more
detailed list can be found in the booklet CIE Planning for Practical Science in Secondary
Schools, Appendix B.
There is a limit to the number of students that you can manage in a laboratory situation,
particularly when students may be moving about. Your particular class size may, of course,
be determined by the size of the room. As a general guide, however, 15 to 20 students is the
maximum number that one person can reasonably be expected to manage, both for safety
reasons and so that adequate support can be given to each student. Larger numbers will
require either input from another person with appropriate qualifications or splitting the class
into two groups for practical lessons.
Points to consider
• It’s fun! The majority of students thoroughly enjoy practical work. The passion that many
scientists have for their subject grew out of their experiences in practical classes.
Students who enjoy what they are doing are likely to carry this enthusiasm over into other
areas of their work and so will be better motivated.
• Integrating practical work into the teaching programme quite simply brings the theory to
life. Teachers often hear students making comments like ‘I’m glad we did that practical
because I can see what the book means now’ and ‘It’s much better doing it than talking
about it.’
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• Chemistry, physics and biology are, by their very nature, practical subjects – both
historically and in the modern world. The majority of students who enter careers in
science will need to employ at least basic practical skills at some time in their career.
Those who pursue non-scientific careers will also benefit from acquiring transferable
practical skills and safety awareness.
• A practical course develops many cross-curricular skills, including literacy, numeracy, ICT
and communication skills. It develops the ability to work both in groups and
independently, and with confidence. It enhances critical thinking skills and it requires
students to make judgements and decisions based on evidence, some of which may well
be incomplete or flawed. It helps to make students more self-reliant and less dependent
on information provided by the teacher.
• The skills developed are of continuous use in a changing scientific world. While
technological advances have changed the nature of practical procedures, the
investigative nature of practical science remains unchanged. The processes of
observation, hypothesis formation, testing, analysing results and drawing conclusions will
always be the processes used in investigative science. The ability to keep an open mind
in the interpretation of data and to develop an appreciation of scientific integrity is of great
value in both science and non-science careers.
• Practical work is not always easy, and persistence is required for skills to develop and for
confidence to grow. Students often relish this challenge and develop a certain pride in a
job well done.
• The more experience students have of using a variety of practical skills, the better
equipped they will be to perform well in the practical exams, both in terms of skills and
confidence. While it could be argued that the required skills could be developed for
paper 3 simply by practising past examination papers, the all-round confidence in
practical ability will be greatly enhanced by wider experience. Similarly for paper 5, while
it could be argued that planning, analysis and evaluation can be taught theoretically,
without hands-on experience of manipulating their own data, putting their plans into
action and evaluating their own procedures and results, students will find this section
difficult and will be at a distinct disadvantage in the examination. Those students who can
draw on personal experience, and so are able to picture themselves performing the
procedure they are describing or recall analysing their own results from a similar
experiment, are much more likely to perform well than those with limited practical skills.
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The syllabus shows how these seven skills are assessed, and the structure is common to all
three sciences. The emphasis of the AS level syllabus is on developing an understanding of,
and practice in, scientific procedures, data collection, analysis and drawing conclusions. It
also starts to develop students’ skills in critical evaluation of experimental procedures by
asking them to suggest improvements to the procedures. In general, students find performing
practical procedures and collecting data more accessible than analysis, while evaluation is
the skill that is least readily accessible. To enable access to these more demanding skills,
students need to understand why an experimental procedure is carried out in a particular
way so that they can recognise sources of error or limitations that could affect the reliability of
their results. Students will not be able to evaluate until they can critically review a practical
procedure.
The A2 syllabus builds upon the skills developed at AS level. Its emphasis is on the higher-
level skills of planning, analysis and evaluation. In order to plan effectively, students need to
be able to evaluate procedures and critically assess results. This is best achieved by
performing practical exercises, starting at AS level with relatively straightforward and familiar
contexts and developing at A2 level by using more complex procedures and less familiar
contexts. Data analysis also develops from AS level into more complex treatments, so
students need to be provided with opportunities to gather suitable data and perform the
appropriate manipulations. Evaluating conclusions and assessing procedures are very high-
order skills. Students who have not had sufficient opportunity to plan and trial their own
investigations will find these skills difficult. While students are not expected to be able to plan
perfectly, they are expected to recognise weaknesses and make reasonable suggestions for
improvement. The best learning tool for developing these skills is to devise a plan, carry out
the investigation and then assess how well the planned procedure worked. The syllabus
gives detailed guidance on the expected skills and learning outcomes.
In summary, Skills 2 to 6 listed above will be assessed at AS level. The first and last will only
be assessed at A2 level, and A2 will also take Skills 5 and 6 to a higher level.
The above list shows the seven skills in the order in which they would be used in an
extended investigation. It is not suggested that you teach these skills in this order, nor would
it be wise. Students who are new to practical work will initially lack the basic manipulative
skills, and the confidence to use them. It would seem sensible, therefore, to start practical
training with Skill 2, initially with very simple tasks, paying attention to establishing safe
working practices.
Once a measure of confidence in AS students’ manual dexterity has been established, they
can move on to exercises that require Skills 3 and 4 to be included. Extensive experience in
carrying out practical procedures allows students to gain awareness of appropriate quantities
and to become more organised in time management and recording data as it is collected.
It is likely that Skill 6, evaluating procedures, will be the most difficult to learn at AS level.
Critical self-analysis does not come easily to many people. ‘My experiment worked well’ is a
frequent response. If students are to master this skill, they need to develop an appreciation
of the reliability and accuracy inherent in the equipment and procedure they are using. Only
then will they be able to identify anomalous results, or results that fall outside the ‘range of
uncertainty’ intrinsic in the apparatus they chose to use and which must therefore be
considered inaccurate. Exercises with less reliable/accurate outcomes can be used to
provide more scope for evaluating errors that result from procedure, technique or apparatus.
Planning is arguably the most demanding of the seven skills. For planning to be effective,
students need to be very well grounded in Skills 2 to 6 so that they can anticipate the
different stages involved in the task and can provide the level of detail required. It is for this
reason that planning skills are not assessed at AS level but form part of the A2 assessment
in paper 5. Students do not develop an understanding of how apparatus works and the sort
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of measurements that can be made using particular types of apparatus unless they use it.
They cannot be taught to plan experiments effectively unless, on a number of occasions,
they are required to:
• plan an experiment;
• perform the experiment according to their plan;
• evaluate what they have done.
Skill 7, evaluating conclusions, is achieved by comparing the outcome of an exercise with the
predicted outcome, and so is also an A2 skill. It should be taught and practised as part of the
planning exercises.
Full details of the requirements for each of these skills can be found on pages 34 to 41 of the
syllabus. The following is a brief summary of the skills involved.
• Methods
The proposed experimental procedure should be workable. Given that the apparatus
has been assembled appropriately, the procedure should allow data to be collected
without undue difficulty. There should be a description, including diagrams, of how the
experiment should be performed and how the key variables will be controlled.
Equipment, of a level of precision appropriate for the measurements to be made, and
quantities of materials to be used should be specified. The use of control experiments
should be considered.
• Risk assessment
Students should be able to carry out a simple risk assessment of their plan,
identifying areas of risk and suggesting suitable safety precautions.
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3. Making measurements and observations
• Measuring/observing
While successfully manipulating the experimental apparatus, it is crucial that students
are able to take measurements with accuracy and/or to make observations with
clarity and discrimination. Accurate meter or burette readings and precise
descriptions of colour changes and precipitates will make it much easier for students
to draw valid conclusions, and to attain a higher score in the test.
They should practise the strategies required for identifying and dealing with results
that appear anomalous.
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• Significant figures
Students should be aware that the number of significant figures to which the answer
is expressed shows the precision of a measured quantity. Therefore, they should take
great care with regard to the number of significant figures quoted in a calculated
value. The general rule is to use the same number of significant figures as (or, at
most, one more than) that of the least precisely measured quantity.
• Data layout
Students should be able to make simple decisions concerning how best to present
the data they have obtained, whether this is in the form of tabulated data or as a
graph. When drawing tables, they should be able to construct the table to give
adequate space for recording data or observations. When plotting graphs, they
should be able to follow best practice guidelines for choosing suitable axis scales,
plotting points and drawing curves or lines of best fit.
• Errors
Students should be used to looking at an experiment, assessing the relative
importance of errors and, where appropriate, expressing these numerically. They
should be aware of two kinds of error:
(i) The ‘error’ that is intrinsic in the use of a particular piece of equipment. Although
we refer to this as an equipment error, we really mean that there is a ‘range of
uncertainty’ associated with measurements made with that piece of equipment.
This uncertainty will be present no matter how skilled the operator might be.
(ii) Experimental error, which is a direct consequence of the level of competence of
the operator or of the effectiveness of the experimental procedure.
• Conclusions
Students should learn to use evidence to support a given hypothesis, to draw
conclusions from the interpretation of observations, data or calculated values, and to
make scientific explanations of their data, observations and conclusions. Whatever
conclusions are drawn, they must be based firmly on the evidence obtained from the
experiment. At the highest level, students should be able to make further predictions
and ask appropriate questions based on their conclusions.
6. Evaluating procedures
Arguably, this is one of the most important, and probably one of the most difficult, skills
for students to develop. In order for the evaluation to be effective, students must have a
clear understanding of the aims and objectives of the exercise, otherwise they will not be
able to judge the effectiveness of the procedures used. They must be able to evaluate
whether any errors in the data obtained exceed those expected due to the equipment
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used. If this is the case, they then need to identify those parts of the procedure that have
generated these excess errors and suggest realistic changes to the procedure that would
result in a more accurate outcome. They should also be able to suggest modifications to
a procedure to answer a new question.
7. Evaluating conclusions
This is also a higher-level skill, which demands that students have a thorough
understanding of the basic theory that underpins the science involved.
The conclusions drawn from a set of data may be judged on the basis of the strength or
weakness of any support for, or against, the original hypothesis. Students should be able
to use the detailed scientific knowledge and understanding they have gained in theory
classes to make judgements about the reliability of the investigation and the validity of the
conclusions they have drawn.
Without practice in this area, students are likely to struggle. To increase their confidence
in drawing conclusions, it is recommended that practical exercises, set within familiar
contexts, are used to allow students the opportunity to draw conclusions, make
evaluations of procedures and assess the validity of their conclusions.
• Other practical activities should offer students the opportunity to devise their own
methods or to apply the methods that they have been taught to solving a problem.
The excitement generated by exposure to ‘new’ and unfamiliar techniques provides a
stimulus that will engage students’ interest and challenge their thinking.
Practical activities may be used as a tool to introduce new concepts – for example,
introducing catalysis by experimentation, followed up by theoretical consideration of the
reasons for the unexpected results obtained. On other occasions, practical work can be
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used to support and enhance the required knowledge and understanding – for example, in
building upon a theoretical consideration of the limiting factors of photosynthesis with a
series of practicals investigating the effect of light intensity and hydrogen carbonate
concentration on photosynthesis in water weed. In all cases, learning will be enhanced most
effectively by practical work that encourages students to be involved and to think, and to
apply and use their knowledge, understanding and skills.
Practical work does not always have to be laboratory based. In classrooms, using models,
role-play and paper cut-outs to simulate processes can be equally valuable. In biology, field
studies also contribute greatly to a student’s appreciation.
There are many strategies you can adopt to integrate practical work into a scheme of work.
You should use a wide range of methods to enhance a variety of subject-specific skills and
simultaneously develop a variety of transferable skills that will be useful throughout students’
future professional lives. Some of the methods you can use to deliver practical work also
enable you to interact on a one-to-one basis with individual students. This allows you to offer
support at a more personal level and develop a greater awareness of an individual student’s
needs.
Your choice of a specific strategy will depend on issues such as class size, laboratory
availability, availability of apparatus, level of competence of your students, availability and
expertise of technical support, time available, your intended learning outcomes for the activity
and safety considerations. The following are some possible strategies for delivering practical
work:
• Teacher demonstrations
These require less time than a whole-class practical, but give little opportunity for
students to develop manipulative skills or to become familiar with equipment. Careful
planning can provide an opportunity for limited student participation. Teacher
demonstrations are a valuable way of showing an unfamiliar procedure at the start of
a practical session, during which students go on to use the method.
(i) Safety – some exercises carry too high a risk factor to be performed in
groups.
(ii) Apparatus – you may need to show complicated procedures or you may
have limited resources.
(iii) Time – demonstrations usually take less time.
(iv) Outcome – some results are difficult to achieve and may be beyond the skill
level of most students. A failed experiment may be seen as a waste of time.
(v) Students’ attention – a danger is that the attention of some students will
drift.
(vi) Manipulative experience – remember that with this strategy, the teacher
gets experience, the students don’t.
There are many good reasons for the teacher to perform a demonstration, but do be
aware that most students have a strong preference for hands-on experimentation. So,
where possible, let them do it!
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• Group work
• Circus of experiments
A circus comprises a number of different exercises that run alongside each other.
Individuals or groups of students work on the different exercises and as they
complete each exercise, they move on to the next. These are a means by which
limited resources can be used effectively.
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There are two basic approaches. Most commonly, during a lesson a number of short
activities are targeted at a specific skill. Alternatively, a number of longer practical
activities are undertaken over a series of lessons, to address a variety of skills. The
circus arrangement may be more difficult for the teacher to manage as the students
are not all doing the same activity. This puts more pressure on the teacher as they
have to cope with advising and answering questions from a variety of investigations.
With circuses spread over a number of sessions, careful planning is needed to enable
the teacher to engage each group of students and to maintain a safe environment. In
these situations, it is useful to include at least two activities that do not involve hands-
on practical work − using data response based simulations or other activities − so that
the teacher can interact with the groups that need a verbal introduction or short
demonstration and can monitor their activities more effectively.
• Project work
Projects are a means by which a student’s interest in a particular topic, which is not
always directly on the syllabus, can be used to develop investigative skills. It can also
be used to access parts of the syllabus that have little laboratory-based investigation.
For example, in gene technology students might use internet-based research to find
examples of genetic modification and present a poster display showing the
implications. This sort of investigative work can be undertaken as either an individual
or a group activity. Once the project is underway, much of the work can be student-
based, outside the classroom. Care is needed in selecting the topics and setting a
timescale so that relevance to the syllabus context is maintained. The work can be
directed towards producing posters, giving a presentation to the group or producing
group or individual reports.
• Extra-curricular clubs
These can play a role in stimulating scientific enquiry methods. There are a number
of ways of using clubs. One is to hold the club session during the teaching day so
that all students can attend. In effect, this becomes additional lesson time in which
students can practise investigative skills, including laboratory work. Such laboratory
work involves materials that have a cost, which must be taken into consideration.
Another way is to hold a club outside the teaching day, in which case it may be
voluntary. Syllabus-specific activities should therefore be limited, but such clubs offer
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valuable opportunities for exciting work unrelated to syllabuses. After-school clubs
could be used as a vehicle for project work that is related to science and that is of
social or economic importance, for example, endangered species or local mineral
resources. Students who do attend the club could be used as a teacher resource by
reporting their findings in a classroom session.
Keeping records
Students often have a problem integrating the practical work with the theory. This is
particularly true when a series of experiments or a long-term investigation or project is
undertaken. Potential issues include the following:
• Some students use odd scraps of paper in the laboratory, which get lost or become
illegible as chemicals are spilled on them. One important criterion is that students are
trained to record results immediately and accurately.
• Practical procedures may be provided by the teacher, or students may write their own
notes from a teacher demonstration. These notes may get lost, so students end up
with results but no procedure or context.
• When results are collected over a period of time, analysis becomes isolated from the
context of the investigation and may not be completed.
The key to minimising these issues is to train students into good work practices. This is
particularly important in colleges where students join at the start of their A levels from a
variety of feeder schools. It is also vital for students with specific learning difficulties that
affect their ability to organise their work, such as dyslexia and Asperger’s syndrome.
Students may be encouraged to integrate their practical notes with their theory notes and
keep them all in one file. Alternatively, they may be encouraged to keep an entirely separate
practical book or file. Loose-leaf files make it easy to add to their notes, but also make it
easier to lose items. Exercise books can be used, but students should be encouraged to
glue any protocols provided and their laboratory records into the book so that they do not get
lost. Students can adopt whichever method they prefer, depending on how they learn.
Whichever option they choose, they need to be encouraged to relate their investigations to
the appropriate theory and to regard it as something that needs to be thoroughly assimilated.
• Integrating the materials generated by practical work with the notes from their
learning of theory can be achieved by interspersing the records of investigations with
the relevant section of theory. This may still require cross-referencing where work
targets several learning outcomes and assessment objectives.
• Keeping a separate practical book enables students to keep records of all the
practical investigations in one place. Students need training to manage practical files
effectively, particularly in keeping the contexts and cross-referencing to the theory. If
care is not taken to develop and maintain these skills, students may perceive
practical work as something different from theory.
• An intermediate between the two extremes is to have a separate section for practical
investigations within each syllabus section in the student’s file, cross-referenced to
the relevant theory.
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How is a practical activity organised?
Preparing for practical work needs thought and organisation. The practical work may be an
activity that forms part of a lesson, it may comprise an entire lesson or it may be an
investigation designed to last for several lessons, but in every case, thorough preparation is
a key prerequisite for success.
Practical and investigative work should be integrated into the programme of study. The
scheme of work should identify appropriate practical investigative experiences for use at the
most suitable time. In designing the scheme of work, you need to do the following:
• Think about the seasonal availability of materials such as organisms and the shelf-life
of thermo-sensitive or hygroscopic substances, which is sometimes short.
• Consider the time taken from order to delivery of resources, the potential for damage
during dispatch and the cost of materials to be obtained from local, national or
international suppliers.
• In centres with a large number of students, you may need to schedule carefully. It
may be possible to permit several groups to do the work simultaneously or in quick
succession, or it may be essential to re-order the scheme of work for different groups
so that scarce resources can be used effectively.
• Take note of national or local health and safety regulations relating to chemicals,
electricity, growing micro-organisms, etc. There may also be regulations controlling
use of controversial materials such as genetically modified organisms.
Once the scheme of work has been established, the next stage is to consider each practical
activity or investigation. In an ideal course, you would go through each of the following
stages when developing each practical exercise. In the real world, however, this is not
always possible the first time you run a course, which is one of the reasons for producing this
booklet. It is better to get going and do some practical work with students than to hold out for
perfection before attempting anything. Obviously, all practical work should be subject to
careful and rigorous risk assessment, no matter how provisional the rest of the supporting
thinking and documentation.
• Decide on the aims of the work – the broad educational goals, in terms of the broad
skill areas involved (e.g. planning), and the key topic areas.
• Consider the investigative skills to be developed. You should refer to the syllabus,
which in the practical skills section includes learning outcomes relating to practical
skill. For example, if the intended practical work is to be a planning exercise, which of
the specific skills identified in the learning outcomes will be developed?
• With reference to the topics included, decide on the intended learning outcomes of
the practical activity or investigation, again referring to the syllabus. For example,
which of the transport learning outcomes will be achieved? In a few cases during the
course, the material on which the practical is based may be unfamiliar, in which case
there may be no topic-related intended learning outcomes. Thus, A2 contexts may
be used for AS practicals, and topic areas not on the syllabus may be used for AS or
A2 practicals.
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• In addition, it is useful to assess any other context of the practical investigation. For
example, is it intended as part of the introduction to a concept, to support a theory or
to demonstrate a process?
• Produce a provisional lesson plan, allocating approximate amounts of time for the
introduction, student activities and summarising.
• Produce and trial a student worksheet. You can use published procedures or those
produced by other teachers, or you can produce your own. As a rule, schedules
produced by others need to be modified to suit individual groups of students or the
available equipment. It is helpful to ask students or another teacher to read
worksheets before they are finalised to identify instructions that are ambiguous or use
inaccessible terminology.
• Refine the lesson plan in relation to the number of students for which the investigation
is intended (whole class or a small group) and the available equipment (does some
have to be shared?) and materials. There are examples of lesson plans and student
worksheets in Appendix 2.
• Carry out a detailed and careful risk assessment (see below) before any preparatory
practical work is done, and certainly well before students do any of the practical work.
You should consider:
o the likelihood that any foreseeable accident might occur – for example, when
pupils are putting glass tube through bungs, they are quite likely to break the
tube and push it though their hand;
o the potential severity of the consequences of any such accident – for example
dropping a plastic dropper bottle of 0.01 mol dm-3 hydrochloric acid onto a
desk would cause much less severe eye injuries than the same accident with
a glass bottle containing 5.0 mol dm-3 hydrochloric acid;
o the measures that can be taken to reduce the severity of the effect of any
accident – for example, the teacher or technician preparing bungs with glass
tubes before the lesson, or using eye protection such as safety spectacles
during all practical work.
• Make an equipment and materials list. This may need to be in sections and should
include the following information:
o materials and apparatus per student or per group (chemicals and glassware);
o shared equipment per laboratory (water baths, microscopes, pH meters);
o any chemicals should include concentrations and quantities needed;
o any equipment should include number required;
o any hazard associated with specific chemicals or equipment should also be
noted and cross-referenced to the risk assessment − sources of information
about safety may be found in the syllabus (and are reproduced below);
o the location of storage areas for equipment and chemicals, which may be
cross-referenced to the equipment and materials in the list.
• Set up and maintain a filing system where master copies of the worksheets, lesson
plans and equipment lists can be stored. It is helpful to have these organised, or at
least indexed, by both their syllabus context and skills developed.
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o did they enjoy the work;
o did they understand the instructions;
o was the point of the work clear to them?
If necessary, the worksheet and lesson plan should be revised.
Risk assessment
All practical work should be carried out in accordance with the health and safety legislation
of the country in which it is done. You should not attempt any activities that conflict with this
legislation.
Hands-on practical work can be carried out safely in schools. However, to ensure that it is
safe, you must identify the hazards and reduce any associated risks to insignificant levels by
adopting suitable control measures. You should carry out these risk assessments for all the
activities involved in running practical science classes, including storage of materials,
preparatory work undertaken by the teacher and any technical support staff, and practical
activities carried out in the classroom, whether demonstrations by the teacher or practical
activities undertaken by the students. Such risk assessments should also be carried out in
accordance with the health and safety legislation of the country in which you are working.
1. How likely is it that something will go wrong? For example, pupils using a double-
sided razor blade to cut up carrots are quite likely to cut themselves.
2. How serious would it be if it did go wrong? For example, the consequences of a
spark from an experiment landing in an open bottle of magnesium powder are likely to
be serious, and include spraying burning magnesium all over the laboratory, burning
many pupils and setting the laboratory ceiling on fire (this scenario is based on a real
accident).
Once you have the answers to these questions, it is possible to plan the practical activity to
minimise the risk of an accident occurring and, if it does, to minimise its possible severity. In
our first example, this could include cutting up the carrot before giving it to young pupils or
providing older pupils with an appropriate sharp knife rather than a razor blade; in the
second, it could include bringing only the amount of magnesium powder required for the
activity into the laboratory.
The likelihood that something will go wrong depends on who is carrying out the activity and
what sort of training and experience they have had. Obviously you would not ask 11-year-old
students to heat concentrated sulphuric acid with sodium bromide or to transfer Bacillus
subtilis cultures from one Petri dish to another, simply because their inexperience and lack
of practical skills would make a serious accident all too likely. However, by the time they
reach post-16, they should have acquired the skills and maturity to carry such activities out
safely.
Decisions need to be made as to whether an activity should only be carried out as a teacher
demonstration or whether it could be performed by students. Clearly, some experiments
should normally only be done as a teacher demonstration or by older students. Well-
motivated and able students may be able to carry out such an experiment at a younger age,
but any deviation from the model risk assessment needs to be discussed and a written
justification must be prepared beforehand.
There are some activities that are intrinsically dangerous and, if included in the suggested
procedure, should always be changed to include safer modes of practice. For example,
15
there are no circumstances under which mouth pipetting is acceptable – pipette fillers of
some sort should always be used.
Teachers tend to think of eye protection as the main control measure for preventing injury. In
fact, personal protective equipment, such as goggles or safety spectacles, is meant to
protect from the unexpected. If you expect a problem, more stringent controls are needed. A
range of control measures may be adopted, the following being the most common. Use:
The importance of using the lowest possible concentrations is not always appreciated, but
the following examples, showing the hazard classification of a range of common solutions,
should make the point.
Reference to the above table shows, therefore, that if sodium hydroxide is in common use, it
should be more dilute than 0.5 mol dm-3. Using more concentrated solutions requires
measures to be taken to reduce the potential risk.
Your risk assessment should not be restricted simply to the materials, procedures and
equipment that will be used, but should have a wider remit that covers the time from when
the students enter the room until they leave it.
Eye protection
Clearly students will need to wear eye protection. Undoubtedly, chemical splash goggles
give the best protection but students are often reluctant to wear goggles. Safety spectacles
give less protection, but may be adequate if nothing classed as corrosive or toxic is in use.
Practical science can be − and should be − fun. It must also be safe. The two are not
incompatible.
16
Further relevant information on health and safety can be obtained from the following
publications:
17
AS skills
Teaching students to manipulate apparatus
Students gain the necessary skills of manipulating apparatus through becoming familiar with
various techniques during the practical part of the course. However, skills do need to be
taught and demonstrated. Manipulating some pieces of apparatus is quite complicated and it
is sometimes advisable to provide short exercises to build student confidence in using certain
techniques. A particular example is the skills needed to perform accurate titrations. In
Appendix 2, Experiment 1 provides a simple titration to build these skills. Prior to students
performing this particular experiment, you may wish to provide short exercises in using the
burette and pipette, depending on their previous experience.
A useful way of showing students the different degrees of precision in volume measurement
is to use a pipette and burette to deliver volumes of water into measuring cylinders. This also
provides several short exercises to give students confidence in using pipettes and burettes.
For example, a 10 cm3 pipette could be used to check out the accuracy of a 10 cm3
measuring cylinder. Another experiment may involve running exactly 20 cm3 of water from a
burette into a 25 cm3 measuring cylinder and a 50 cm3 measuring cylinder to demonstrate
the greater accuracy of a 25 cm3 measuring cylinder.
These skills are fundamental to practical work and many experiments and investigations
require students to use both. As experienced scientists, we may forget that students do not
automatically acquire these skills. The best way to teach students to make observations and
measurements is by getting them to practise using these techniques in the context of their
practical work. In this way, students come to understand that the techniques they are
learning are not just necessary for examinations, but are important skills, without which
chemistry could not progress.
Observational skills involve noting the detail of something. It may be a colour change or the
production of bubbles of gas. Even making simple observations, a skill we, as teachers, may
take for granted, needs to be developed through opportunities in a practical course.
Making measurements and understanding their accuracy is also something that students
need to practise throughout their course. Students need to consider to how many decimal
places a particular piece of apparatus can measure and how appropriate such
measurements are. For example in Experiment 15, which concerns measuring rates of
reaction, students may have access to stop watches that measure to the nearest hundredth
of a second, but accuracy to the nearest second is more appropriate. Thus students should
be encouraged to consider what number of decimal places to use when recording their data.
This does not mean that results should arbitrarily be rounded up or down, as this will affect
their reliability.
In the previous section we mentioned the techniques required for titration and suggested
short exercises you could ask students to perform prior to doing Experiment 1. These short
exercises could also be used to teach students how to make accurate measurements using a
burette, measuring cylinder and pipette. Reading the scale with the eye level with the bottom
of the meniscus is something you will need to reinforce. Fig. 1.3 in Experiment 1 provides a
good illustration of why this is essential.
18
Burettes should be read to the nearest 0.05 cm3. It is possible to determine whether the
bottom of the meniscus is nearer to a graduated mark or nearer to the middle of two 0.1 cm3
marks, hence reading to the nearest 0.05 cm3. However, it is not possible to say precisely
that a reading is, for example, 20.01 cm3 because the closeness of the 0.1 cm3 marks does
not allow this degree of accuracy. In addition, the smallest drop that a burette can deliver is
approximately 0.05 cm3.
The thermometer is another measuring instrument where accuracy depends on the scale. A
thermometer calibrated in 1ºC intervals can be read to the nearest 0.5ºC, whereas another
calibrated in 0.2ºC intervals can be read to the nearest 0.1ºC. A good experiment for
exploring this is Experiment 8 in Appendix 2, where the thermometer we suggest you use is
calibrated from −5ºC to +50ºC, and the graduations are 0.2ºC. You can ask students why this
choice is preferable to a thermometer measuring from −10ºC to +110ºC in 1ºC intervals.
Many measurements require a judgement to be made. This is very clear in Experiment 15,
where the reaction rate between sodium thiosulphate solution and dilute hydrochloric acid is
measured by timing the disappearance of a cross drawn on a piece of paper. The stopwatch
is stopped when the student judges that the cross has disappeared. No matter how accurate
the stopwatch, the student’s judgement will affect the reliability of the data. If you ask
different groups what measurements they made at the same temperature, there is likely to be
a wide variation. In this case, the measurements should be made by the same individual to
make them more reliable. If there is time, experiments should be repeated until they do not
show too much variation to ensure reliability. In a titration with a sharp end-point, titres
should be within 0.10 cm3.
There is little point in doing experiments if the results are not recorded in a systematic way.
This is a skill to which students need to be introduced. Our experience, and probably yours,
is that students need to be convinced that they should record results so that they can use
them to draw conclusions when the experiment is over. Too often students make
unintelligible scribblings, the meaning of which they think they will remember accurately for
the next lesson. Getting students into the habit of recording their results is probably
something that will require persistence and patience, but it is worth it.
Tables are a very good way to organise results, provided that some thought has gone into
their construction, for example thinking about how many columns will be needed. Columns
should be correctly labelled, with appropriate headings that describe what the data is and the
units used if a measurement is involved. This also makes drawing graphs easier, since
column headings can then be transferred onto axes.
In the previous section we discussed the number of decimal places that should be used. In a
column of results, all the raw data should be expressed to the same number of decimal
places, as this indicates that the accuracy is consistent. This is something that students need
to be reminded about, quite frequently, as it is fundamental to experimental work. When data
in a column is calculated, then the number of significant figures needs to be considered; this
should be appropriate to the degree of accuracy of the apparatus used. This is decided by
determining which of the measurements is least accurate and to what number of significant
figures it is accurate. The appropriate number of significant figures to be recorded is this
number, or one more than this number.
In the very first experiment in Appendix 2, students are introduced to putting their titration
results in a table. In Experiments 2 and 3, they are expected to produce similar tables for
their data. Check on this as you go round to different students and ensure that their tables of
19
results are neat. This is important because neatly recording results saves time − it prevents
students needlessly having to copy out data, which could result in them copying incorrectly.
An exercise that you may wish to develop is to give students a range of different tables that
have errors in them or that are constructed in an inappropriate fashion. Ask them to work in
groups and suggest ways in which the tables could be improved.
Graphs are often an effective way of presenting data and demonstrating relationships and
trends. Again, getting students into the right habits from the outset will pay dividends for them
later. Some of the key features of drawing a graph are:
You can really emphasise this in the rate experiments suggested in Appendix 1: Experiments
14 to 16.
Many experiments involve presenting qualitative data. This also needs to be accurately
recorded in such a way that makes it easy to understand the results. If a particular
experiment has several stages, then any changes, or lack of them, should be clearly
identified at each stage.
Drawing conclusions is a skill that involves analysing the results of a practical and stating
and explaining what they show.
Some conclusions are drawn from qualitative observations. In Experiment 21, the relative
oxidising powers of the halogens are seen through their displacement reactions. The results
are then drawn together to show a trend in oxidising power from chlorine to iodine.
Graphs are an excellent way of showing trends and relationships. A straight-line graph
shows that there is a directly proportional relationship between the dependent and
independent variables. A conclusion should always be supported by evidence from the data
and in the case of the directly proportional relationship, the graph should be referred to as
providing the evidence. Sometimes graphs are used to find unknown values by using co-
ordinates or extrapolation. Students need to practise this skill to gain confidence in it.
20
Students should be encouraged to consider why data is analysed in the way that it is. For
example, what is the advantage of drawing a graph over just presenting results in a table?
Evaluation is a skill that students do find difficult to develop. They need to think critically
about the reliability of their data and the validity of their conclusions. When developing
students’ skills in this area, a good place to begin is to consider errors.
There are two types of error that affect results. Random errors cause results to fluctuate
around a mean value and data is made more reliable by averaging repeated readings.
Systematic errors affect all measurements in the same way, producing lower or higher values
than the true result. These cannot be averaged out. Sometimes they are due to the particular
experimental procedure that has been adopted. For example, when one person performs a
rate experiment it may take time to mix the reagents and start the stop clock. This error can
be minimised, or even eliminated, by using two people, one to do the timing and one to mix
the reagents. Another source of systematic error may be the measuring device itself. This
can be checked by seeing if two different instruments give the same values. In Experiment 8,
there will be unavoidable heat losses when trying to assess enthalpy change and this causes
a systematic error.
Students should be looking at experiments and assessing the relative importance of errors in
measurement, or in making observations, so that they can judge which sources of error are
most important. They should be able to express these errors in a standard format. For
example, the measurement of volume from a burette may be 20.00 cm3 ± 0.05 cm3, while
that from an electronic balance may be ± 0.01 g.
Experiment 4 provides a good opportunity to compare values obtained for the formula of
magnesium oxide by different groups of students. The loss of magnesium oxide during flare-
ups is probably the most significant source of error. If students have only one value, how can
they tell how accurate their results and conclusions are?
The above points need to be discussed at the end of experiments. Get students to suggest a
checklist they could use to evaluate experiments that incorporates these ideas. Also point out
to them that perfect experiments make for poor evaluation.
21
Designing a practical course for the AS year
We have already expounded the essential place of practical work in any chemistry course.
Students develop their practical skills through being taught how to use them and then
practising them.
The course we have suggested in Appendix 1 is simply that, a suggestion. There may be
other experiments that you think work better or demonstrate a concept more effectively. In
building our practical course we have gone through the theoretical and practical learning
outcomes that need to be achieved and linked them to the syllabus. We have tried to provide
a variety of approaches and to suggest practicals, where possible, with a ‘real world’ context.
You will notice that certain skills are practised in several different experiments. For example,
titration work occurs in three experiments at the outset of the course to build the necessary
skills and these are reinforced in Experiments 13 and 23.
It is very tempting to drill students in the skills they need by endlessly practising past
examination papers, but this provides an arid experience for them and does not relate the
concepts they meet in theory to observations made through experiment. Yes, there is a place
for doing past-paper work, but this should be limited to the very end of the course to reinforce
the skills developed from all the varied practical work we recommend that students should
carry out.
Sources
Many of the experiments listed in Appendix 1 can be found in the following books:
Classic Chemistry Experiments: One hundred tried and tested experiments, complied by
Kevin Hutchings, published by the Royal Society of Chemistry, www.rsc.org
(ISBN 0 85404 9193)
Classic Chemistry Demonstrations: One hundred tried and tested experiments, complied by
Ted Lister, published by the Royal Society of Chemistry, www.rsc.org
(ISBN 1 870 343 38 7)
22
Appendix 1
23
Appendix 1
24
Appendix 1
25
Appendix 1
26
Appendix 1
27
Appendix 1
28
Appendix 1
29
Appendix 1
30
Appendix 1
31
Appendix 1
32
Appendix 1
33
Appendix 1
9.4f and 22. Reactions of the aqueous halide ions − testing for halides
Practical
Assess- • Describe and explain the reactions of These test-tube experiments give qualitative tests for halide Classic Chemistry
ment halide ions with aqueous silver ions ions. Experiments, The Royal
followed by aqueous ammonia Experiment 1. Add five drops of silver nitrate solution Society of Chemistry −
• Have performed the test for silver (Corrosive, Dangerous to the environment) separately to Experiment 89
halides detailed in the Practical solutions of sodium chloride, sodium bromide and sodium
Assessment iodide. Note the appearance of the precipitates.
Now add fairly concentrated ammonia solution (about 8 mol
dm-3) (Corrosive, Dangerous to the environment). Note what
happens to each precipitate.
Experiment 2. Repeat Experiment 1 to obtain a second set of
silver halide precipitates. This time leave them to stand in the
light and note their appearance.
Experiment 3. Add five drops of the three halide solutions
used in Experiment 1 separately to lead nitrate solution (Toxic,
Dangerous to the environment). Note the colours of the
precipitates.
Timing: 45 minutes
34
Appendix 1
35
Appendix 1
36
Appendix 1
37
Appendix 1
38
Appendix 2
Background information
An acid neutralises a base to form a salt and water. Hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide
are completely ionised in water. We say they are a strong acid or base because they are
completely ionised in solution The ions present in hydrochloric acid are H+(aq) and Cl –(aq)
and in sodium hydroxide are Na+(aq) and OH–(aq).
You are going to use the technique of titration to produce a sodium chloride solution.
Titration is a very accurate way of investigating the reaction of two solutions. It can be used
to analyse the amount of a particular substance in a solution. This is known as quantitative
analysis. In a titration, one solution is placed in a burette and the other is placed in a conical
flask using a pipette. The solution in the burette is then run into the conical flask until there is
a complete reaction. In this case you will completely neutralise a solution of hydrochloric acid
with sodium hydroxide solution. You will use an indicator to tell you when there is complete
neutralisation. The indicator changes colour at the exact point of neutralisation. In this case
you may use any acid-base indicator because you will be titrating a strong acid with a strong
base.
Questions
1 (a) Write the word and symbol equation for the reaction of hydrochloric acid with sodium
hydroxide.
(b) Write the equation again, this time using the ion symbols.
(c) Only two of the ions you have written in 1(b) take part in the neutralisation reaction.
Write the neutralisation equation without the spectator ions. The spectator ions are
those that appear on both sides of the equation.
(d) Sodium hydroxide is a soluble base. What is the name given to soluble bases?
Safety
Sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid are corrosive. (Although the solutions
are very dilute, you should mop up any spillages and rinse any solution off your
skin or clothing with water).
Always use a pipette filler, or other suitable safety device. Never be tempted to use your
mouth to draw liquid into the pipette.
39
Appendix 2
Procedure
1. Rinse two beakers with deionised water. Label one beaker alkali and wash this out with
a little of the 0.1 mol dm3 sodium hydroxide solution. Do this twice to ensure that any
water used during the rinsing of the beaker will not dilute the sodium hydroxide solution
you are about to put in the beaker. Fill the beaker about half full with the sodium
hydroxide solution.
Now label the other beaker acid and after rinsing with water, wash it out twice using
small volumes of hydrochloric acid before filling this half full with the acid solution. At the
moment you do not know the exact concentration of the hydrochloric acid solution. The
titration you do will allow you to calculate this.
2. Pipette exactly 25.0 cm3 sodium hydroxide solution into a clean conical flask (Fig. 1.1).
The pipette can be cleaned in a similar way to the beakers, remembering to finish by
washing it out with a little of the alkali solution twice to ensure no dilution will take place
when using the pipette.
In this case it does not matter if there is some deionised water left in the flask after
rinsing it. Now add one or two drops of acid-base indicator.
Pipette filler
Pipette
Beaker
Figure 1.1 A pipette safety filler is used to draw a measured volume of sodium hydroxide
solution from the beaker into the pipette.
3. Once the burette has been rinsed and washed out with the acid solution, fill it nearly to
the top (Fig. 1.2).
Clamp the burette carefully and run a little acid through into the beaker until the tip
becomes full.
Burett
Figure 1.2 Fill the burette with hydrochloric acid solution and ensure the tip is full.
40
Appendix 2
4. Now read the burette and record the reading in the middle row of a table like the one
below. Be careful that your eye is level with the bottom of the meniscus or your reading
will not be accurate (Fig. 1.3).
Figure 1.3
rough 1 2
titration
final burette
reading/cm3
initial burette
reading/cm3
volume of acid
added/cm3
5. Place the conical flask below the burette on a piece of white paper. Run the acid into the
flask fairly quickly, shaking it all the time. As soon as the colour of the indicator changes,
close the tap and note the final burette reading. Record this result in your table above
your initial reading. Subtract the initial reading from the final reading to give you the
volume of acid added.
6. The first titration is a rough titration to give you an idea of the volume you need to add to
exactly neutralise the acid. It is quite likely that you added a slight excess of acid as you
were doing the titration quickly. Now repeat steps 2 to 5 but this time run in the acid
quickly until you reach about 1 cm3 less than the volume you added in the rough titration.
Swirl the contents of the flask and add one drop of acid at a time from the burette until
the indicator just changes colour. Record this volume. This should represent the exact
volume you need to add to neutralise 25 cm3 of 0.1 mol dm3 of sodium hydroxide
solution.
7. To ensure that you have a reliable volume of alkali, you should repeat the whole titration
again until you get two readings that agree within 0.05 cm3.
8. Now you are sure of the volume of sodium hydroxide you require, repeat the titration
without using the indicator. This should give you a pure sodium chloride solution, without
any excess acid or alkali.
9. Evaporate all the water away from a small sample of your neutral solution using the
apparatus in Fig. 1.4. Be sure to adjust your Bunsen burner to give a suitable flame. You
will be left with small, white crystals of sodium chloride.
41
Appendix 2
Evaporating basin
containing your neutral
solution
Beaker
Water
Heat
Figure 1.4
Questions
2 (a) How many moles of NaOH were present in 25.0 cm3 solution?
(b) How many moles of HCl were present in the volume of acid you used to neutralise
the NaOH solution? To calculate this you will need to refer to the equations you
wrote in Question 1.
(c) What was the exact concentration of the hydrochloric acid in mol dm-3?
(d) How many moles of sodium chloride were produced in the solution in the conical
flask?
(e) What mass of salt was produced in the neutral solution?
42
Appendix 2
Learning outcomes
These are printed on the Student Sheet.
A suggested approach
If students have not used a burette or pipette before, it would be sensible to spend a few
minutes demonstrating the techniques involved in titration.
The Student Sheet gives full information about how to do the practical. Students could
prepare for the practical session by reading the sheet in advance and answering Question 1.
The students should finish the titration in a 1-hour session. The neutral sodium chloride
solutions should be kept if you intend to evaporate off the water. It is motivating and fun for
students to actually see the product that they have made and the second lesson could also
be used to go through the mole calculations. It is also important to remind students about the
correct use of the Bunsen burner.
Technical information
Requirements per student/group:
For the titration
Two 100 cm3 beakers
25.0 cm3 pipette
Pipette filler or equivalent safety device
50.0 cm3 burette
Conical flask
Sheet of white paper or a white tile
Wash bottle and deionised water
0.10 mol dm-3 NaOH(aq) – about 80 cm3 (corrosive)
Approximately 0.1 mol dm-3 HCl (aq) – about 80 cm3 (irritant)
Stoppered flask to store a sample of the neutral solution prepared
For the evaporation of the neutral solution
Evaporating basin
250 cm3 beaker
Tripod and gauze
Heating mat
Bunsen burner
Safety
The main points are included on the Student Sheet but it is the teacher’s
responsibility to ensure that a full risk assessment is carried out prior to the practical
session(s). MSDS sheets should be consulted so that the correct action can be taken
in event of a spillage and/or accident.
43
Appendix 2
44
Appendix 2
Background information
Iron performs a vital role in our bodies. It is present in red blood cells and forms part of the
haemoglobin molecule, which combines with oxygen from the lungs. The oxygen is then
transported all round the body. When young people are growing rapidly, the body may not
have enough iron and this causes anaemia. This can be remedied by a course of ‘ferrous
sulphate’ tablets, often known as iron tablets.
The iron in iron tablets is in the form of hydrated iron(II) sulphate (sometimes called ferrous
sulphate). As the name iron(II) suggests, the Fe2+ ion is present. To determine just how much
Fe2+ is in each tablet, we can react the Fe2+ ions with manganate(VII) ions, which have a
formula MnO4-.
Although this ionic equation may appear complicated at this point in your course, you can
see from the colours that the deep purple of the MnO4-(aq) will disappear when the reaction
is complete.
The end point is when the addition of one extra drop of potassium manganate(VII) solution
turns the solution in the conical flask to a pale pink colour.
Question
1 Explain why this volumetric analysis does not require an indicator.
Safety
1.0 mol dm-3 sulphuric acid is irritant. Wash all spillages with plenty of water.
Always use a pipette filler, or other suitable safety device. Never be tempted to use your
mouth to draw liquid into the pipette.
45
Appendix 2
Procedure
1. Accurately weigh two iron tablets and record their mass.
2. Grind up the tablets with about 5 cm3 of 1.0 mol dm-3 sulphuric acid, using a pestle and
mortar. Transfer this into a 100 cm3 volumetric flask. Use further small volumes of the
dilute sulphuric acid to rinse the ground-up tablets into the flask, until no traces of the
iron tablets are left in the mortar.
3. Add more 1.0 mol dm-3 sulphuric acid to make the volume in the volumetric flask exactly
100.0 cm3. Stopper the flask and shake it thoroughly to mix the solution. Not all of the
outer coating of the tablets will dissolve. This does not matter as it does not contain any
Fe2+ ions.
4. Use a pipette and pipette filler to withdraw 10.0 cm3 of the tablet solution and transfer it
into a clean conical flask.
5. Wash a 100 cm3 beaker with deionised water and then twice with small volumes of the
0.0050 mol dm3 potassium manganate(VII) solution you are going to use. Now half fill
the beaker with the potassium manganate(VII) solution and use this to fill the burette.
Remember that the burette does not have to be filled to the 0.00 cm3 mark. Make sure
that you run some of the solution back into the beaker to ensure that the tip of the
burette is full. Read the volume of potassium manganate (VII) solution in the burette. In
this case the colour of the potassium manganate(VII) solution is so intense that you
cannot see the bottom of the meniscus so you must use the top of the meniscus to
measure the volume.
6. Draw up a table in which you can record your titration results. Label the rows and
columns, using the appropriate units. Think about which value you will need to subtract
from which when deciding on the order of your rows.
7. Perform one rough titration, followed by two accurate titrations that agree within 0.05 cm3
and record the results in your table.
Questions
2 (a) How many moles of MnO4-(aq) were added from the burette?
(b) How many moles of Fe2+(aq) were present in 10.0 cm3 of the iron tablet solution?
(c) How many moles of Fe2+(aq) were present in 100.0 cm3 of the tablet solution?
(d) What is the mass of iron in the two tablets?
(e) Find out the mass of iron that the manufacturer states is in one tablet. How does
your result compare?
Suggest why there are differences.
(f) If you were to repeat this experiment, how would you make sure that your result was
as accurate as possible?
3 The reaction you have performed can be written as two half equations.
(a) Use only the ion symbols for iron(II) and iron(III) to write a half equation showing the
oxidation reaction. Use e- for the electron that is lost.
(b) The other half equation is the reaction of the manganate(VII) ion. What type of
reaction will this be?
4 In air, an aqueous solution of iron(II) ions will oxidise easily to iron(III) ions. The addition
of dilute sulphuric acid prevents this. However, there is another reason for adding dilute
sulphuric acid. What is the other reason?
46
Appendix 2
Learning outcomes
These are printed on the Student Sheet.
A suggested approach
Set the scene by explaining the context. Iron deficiency, or anaemia, affects many people
and particularly the young. ‘Ferrous sulphate’ tablets, often just called iron tablets, rectify this
deficiency. Iron deficiency may be the result of not eating enough foods containing iron and a
change in diet to include more iron-rich food is often recommended to patients.
When drug companies manufacture iron tablets they put a set amount of iron into each
tablet. This is usually written on the packet. One way a drug company can check the iron
content of its tablet is to analyse it using this titration.
The Student Sheet gives full information about how to do the practical. Students could
prepare for the practical session by reading the sheet in advance and answering Question 1.
The students should finish the titration in a 1-hour session.
Technical information
Requirements per student/group:
Notes
1. If brown or red colours are seen during the titrations, this will produce inaccurate results.
The remedy is to add more dilute sulphuric acid.
2. The packet of iron tablets often describes the iron tablets as ‘200 mg tablets’.
47
Appendix 2
3. If two ‘200 mg tablets’ are used, then the expected volume of 0.0050 mol dm-3
KMnO4(aq) will be 28.60 cm3 per titration. If the mass of iron is 200 mg, then the volume
will be 14.30 cm3.
Safety
The main points are included on the Student Sheet but it is the teacher’s
responsibility to ensure that a full risk assessment is carried out prior to the practical
session(s). MSDS sheets should be consulted so that the correct action can be taken
in event of a spillage and/or accident.
48
Appendix 2
Background information
Magnesium reacts with acid to give a salt and water.
Question
1 Write the word and balanced equation for the reaction of magnesium with dilute
hydrochloric acid.
If the mass of magnesium is measured, then the moles of magnesium can be calculated.
Once this amount is known, you can use the equation you have written in Question 1 to
calculate the moles of hydrogen that are produced. If the volume of this amount of hydrogen
is measured, then you can calculate the volume of 1 mole, also known as the molar volume.
Safety
Hydrochloric acid is corrosive. (Although the solution is very dilute, you should
mop up any spillages and rinse any solution off your skin or clothing with water).
Procedure
1. Clean a piece of magnesium ribbon about 3.5 cm long then weigh it accurately. This
should weigh between 0.02 g and 0.04 g; if not, adjust the length of magnesium until it
does.
2. Place about 30 cm3 1M hydrochloric acid in the burette and top this up to 50 cm3 with
water.
3. Push the magnesium into the top of the burette, above the liquid level, so that it is held
by its own tension (see Fig. 5.1).
4. Add 50 cm3 of water to a crystallising dish.
5. Quickly invert the burette into the water. Provided you do this quickly and carefully, you
will lose very little of the liquid in the burette. The liquid level should be on the graduated
scale. If it is not, open the tap for a moment to allow the level to drop. Record the burette
reading.
49
Appendix 2
Figure 5.1
6. Clamp the burette and record the volume. Remember that the scale is now upside down.
7. Soon the acid will diffuse down to the magnesium and it will begin to react. When the
magnesium has all reacted, note the new volume and calculate the volume of hydrogen
produced.
8. Record the temperature of the laboratory.
Questions
2 (a) How many moles of magnesium did you use?
(b) How many moles of hydrogen are produced? To calculate this you will need to refer
to the equation you wrote in Question 1.
(c) What is the volume of 1 mole of hydrogen gas at the temperature and pressure of
the laboratory?
3 The general gas equation is pV = nRT, where p is the pressure, T is the temperature and
R is the ideal gas constant. This can be used to calculate the volume of gas as standard
temperature and pressure (s.t.p.). Since n, R and p stay the same, the equation for
calculating this is
V1 V2
=
T1 T2
50
Appendix 2
Learning outcomes
These are printed on the Student Sheet.
A suggested approach
Begin by explaining to students that the molar volume of any gas is always the same at the
same temperature and pressure. In this experiment they are going to calculate this volume
under room conditions. Inverting the burette safely and with little loss of liquid is not difficult
but you will need to demonstrate the procedure before they start. Bring the lip of the
crystallising dish up to the top of the burette and rest it there. Now swing the tap end round
and upright. If the liquid level is not on the scale, open the tap momentarily to allow the liquid
level to drop down to the scale. The actual practical should take approximately 30 minutes.
There will then be time for students to do the calculations. Question 3 uses the general
equation. If this has not been covered in theory, you may wish to give a very brief
explanation, while saving a more rigorous explanation until later. The main point is that the
volume of a gas varies in direct proportion to the temperature.
Technical information
Requirements per student/group:
Crystallising dish
50.0 cm3 burette
Clamp stand
1 mol dm-3 hydrochloric acid
0.02 g – 0.04 g standard magnesium ribbon (this is about 3.5 cm)
Thermometer
Safety
The main points are included on the Student Sheet but it is the teacher’s
responsibility to ensure that a full risk assessment is carried out prior to the practical
session. MSDS sheets should be consulted so that the correct action can be taken in
event of a spillage and/or accident.
51
Appendix 2
Background information
To make a chemical bond, another bond must first be broken. It is the sum of the energy
changes in making and breaking bonds that results in the overall energy change in a
reaction. Enthalpy is the stored energy in a compound. It has a symbol H. If some of this
stored energy is released during a reaction, the surroundings heat up. This is an exothermic
reaction and we say that the change of enthalpy, ∆H, is negative. (∆ means change of.)
However, if energy is absorbed during a reaction, then ∆H is positive and the surroundings
cool down.
To measure enthalpy changes you are going to use a polystyrene cup as a calorimeter (Fig.
8.1). A calorimeter is any container that is used to measure energy changes from chemical
reactions.
Figure 8.1
Question
1 The simple apparatus in Fig. 8.1 is very effective in minimising energy losses and this is
important if we are going to measure accurately any energy changes arising from
reactions.
Explain three ways in which heat energy loss is minimised using this apparatus.
52
Appendix 2
Safety
Procedure
Experiment 2: The reaction between citric acid and sodium hydrogen carbonate
C6H8O7(aq) + 3NaHCO3(s) → C6H8O7Na3(aq) + 3CO2(g) + 3H2O(l)
Use the same procedure as in Experiment 1 but this time use 25 cm3 of 1 mol dm-3 citric acid
and weigh out 8 g sodium hydrogen carbonate. This reaction froths up, so add the powdered
solid slowly enough to prevent it coming over the top of the cup. Keep stirring and record the
maximum temperature change.
53
Appendix 2
Questions
2 (a) In Experiment 1, zinc was in excess. Calculate the moles of copper(II) sulphate
used and the moles of zinc used. Now use the reacting moles in the balanced
equation to show that zinc is indeed the reactant that is in excess.
(b) Similarly, show that sodium hydrogen carbonate is the reagent in excess.
3 Write the ionic equations for the reactions in Experiments 1 and 2. Do not include any
spectator ions.
54
Appendix 2
Learning outcomes
These are printed on the Student Sheet.
A suggested approach
Students will already have some familiarity with exothermic and endothermic reactions but it
will probably be worth reminding them about this before they start. The concept of bond
breaking and bond making and how this contributes to the overall enthalpy change is
mentioned in the ‘Background information’ section on the Student Sheet, as is the
requirement to minimise heat losses. Under the ‘Procedure’, the concept of having one
reactant in excess is described but the reason is explored in Question 2.
The practical will take about 40 minutes, leaving time for the ‘Processing your results’ section
to be tackled. Students could finish off calculations and answer the questions for homework.
Technical information
Requirements per student/group:
Polystyrene cup with lid
Glass beaker large enough to stand the polystyrene cup in but not much larger (see Fig. 8.1
on the Student Sheet)
Thermometer, −5ºC to 50ºC
50 cm3 and 25 cm3 measuring cylinders
1 mol dm-3 citric acid, approximately 30 cm3
0.2 mol dm-3 copper(II) sulphate, approximately 60 cm3 (harmful)
1 g zinc powder (highly flammable)
8 g sodium hydrogen carbonate
Access to a balance weighing 0.01 g
Safety
The main points are included on the Student Sheet but it is the teacher’s
responsibility to ensure that a full risk assessment is carried out prior to the practical
session. MSDS sheets should be consulted so that the correct action can be taken in
event of a spillage and/or accident.
55
Appendix 2
56
Appendix 2
Background information
Le Chatelier’s Principle applies to systems in dynamic equilibrium. One way of stating this is:
The position of the equilibrium of a system changes to minimise the effect of any imposed
change in conditions.
Question
1 What conditions, other than concentration, could affect the position of equilibrium?
Your teacher is going to demonstrate the effects of changing the concentration of substances
in this dynamic equilibrium mixture:
BiOCl (s) + 2HCl (aq) ⇌ BiCl3(aq) + H2O(l)
White precipitate colourless solution
Question
2 Explain what is meant by the terms ‘reversible reaction’ and ‘dynamic equilibrium’.
Your teacher will prepare a solution of bismuth trichloride from bismuth oxide chloride.
Question
3 How might your teacher prepare bismuth trichloride?
Your teacher will add water to the above equilibrium mixture.
Questions
4 (a) Predict what you will observe when water is added.
(b) Use Le Chatelier’s Principle to explain your prediction.
Following the addition of water, your teacher will add concentrated hydrochloric acid to the
equilibrium mixture.
Questions
5 What safety precautions should your teacher adopt?
6 (a) Predict what you will observe when concentrated hydrochloric acid is added.
(b) Use Le Chatelier’s Principle to explain your prediction.
57
Appendix 2
Learning outcomes
By the end of this lesson students should:
• understand what is meant by a reversible reaction and a dynamic equilibrium;
• have been introduced to Le Chatelier’s Principle;
• have observed the effects of changes of concentration and pressure on the equilibrium
position.
A suggested approach
Begin the lesson with Demonstration 1. Use this to cover the intended learning outcomes.
With discussion of the underlying theory, this could easily take 25 minutes. Now give out the
Student Sheet, ‘The effect of altering the concentration on an equilibrium reaction’, and ask
students to use it to predict what will happen in Demonstration 2. Test their predictions by
doing the second demonstration.
Demonstration 1: The equilibrium between Co(H2O)62+(aq) and CoCl42-(aq)
Theory
The equilibrium is:
Co(H2O)62+(aq) + Cl-(aq) ⇌ CoCl42-(aq) + 6H2O(l) ∆H = +ve
pink blue
This experiment allows you to demonstrate the effect of concentration and temperature on
the equilibrium position of this reaction. The changes seen are in accordance with Le
Chatelier’s Principle.
Technical information
Six boiling tubes and a rack
100 cm3 measuring cylinder
Three 250 cm3 beakers
Two dropping pipettes
Access to a balance
4 g cobalt chloride-6-water (CoCl2.6H2O)
100 cm3 of concentrated hydrochloric acid
200 cm3 of crushed ice
Safety
Hydrochloric acid is corrosive. (It has a highly exothermic reaction with water, so
always add the concentrated acid to the aqueous solution, never do it the other
way round).
It is the teacher’s responsibility to ensure that a full risk assessment is carried out prior to the
demonstration.
58
Appendix 2
Procedure
Before the demonstration. Boil a beaker of water and prepare a beaker of crushed ice and
water. Dissolve about 4 g cobalt(II) chloride-6-water in 40 cm3 of water. A pink solution
containing Co(H2O)62+ will be formed.
The demonstration. Take the pink cobalt chloride solution and make it up to 100 cm3 with
concentrated hydrochloric acid using a measuring cylinder. A violet solution will be formed.
Adding more hydrochloric acid will produce a blue solution containing more CoCl42-(aq), while
adding water will restore the pink colour. By trial and error, produce the ‘in between’ violet
coloured solution containing both cobalt ions. Place 2 cm depth in each of the six boiling
tubes. Place these on the bench in groups of three.
1 Effect of concentration
Keep one boiling tube as a control. Use a dropping pipette to add water to a second tube
and concentrated hydrochloric acid to a third. Following an explanation of why this
demonstrates Le Chatelier’s Principle, you can reverse the changes.
2 Effect of temperature
Keep one boiling tube as a control. Place a second tube in hot water (over 90ºC). It will
go blue because this is an endothermic reaction in the forward direction. Then put the
third tube in the ice/water beaker and this will change to pink. Again, this shows Le
Chatelier’s Principle well and you can reverse the changes.
Theory
The equilibrium is:
BiOCl (s) + 2HCl (aq) ⇌ BiCl3(aq) + H2O(l)
White precipitate colourless solution
This experiment allows you to demonstrate the effect of concentration on the equilibrium
position of this reaction. The changes seen are in accordance with Le Chatelier’s Principle.
Technical information
Boiling tube and rack
100 cm3 beaker
250 cm3 beaker
Dropping pipette
Stirring rod
2.6 g bismuth oxide chloride
Concentrated hydrochloric acid
Safety
Hydrochloric acid is corrosive. (It has a highly exothermic reaction with water, so
always add the concentrated acid to the aqueous solution, never do it the other
way round).
Procedure
Dissolve a little bismuth oxide chloride (approximately 2.6 g) into 3 cm3 concentrated
hydrochloric acid in a test tube. This gives a colourless solution of bismuth trichloride. Pour
59
Appendix 2
this slowly into another boiling tube containing about 12 cm3 water. (Never do this the other
way round!) A white precipitate of bismuth oxide chloride immediately appears. Transfer the
mixture into a 100 cm3 beaker and add another 2 cm3 of concentrated hydrochloric acid and
stir. The precipitate re-dissolves. Now add 25 cm3 of water and the precipitate re-appears.
Adding 3 cm3 of concentrated hydrochloric acid will again shift the equilibrium to the
colourless side. You can continue doing this by transferring the mixture to a 250 cm3 beaker.
60
Appendix 2
Background information
Ethyl ethanoate is an important solvent. One way of manufacturing it is shown by the
following equation.
CH3COOH + C2H5OH ⇌ CH3COOC2H5 + H2O
ethanoic acid ethanol ethyl ethanoate
This is the equilibrium you are going to investigate. It takes a very long time for this reversible
reaction to reach equilibrium. An acid catalyst, such as hydrochloric acid is used to speed up
both the forward and reverse reactions. This enables the equilibrium to be reached in a much
shorter time. The catalyst does not affect the value of Kc.
Question
1 What is the expression for Kc for this equilibrium?
Safety
Glacial ethanoic acid is corrosive. (Mop up any spillages with plenty of water).
Procedure
1. Your class is going to set up five boiling tubes with different starting concentrations of the
various reactants. The volumes of each reactant you need to add are shown in the
following table. Take great care with glacial ethanoic acid − it is pure ethanoic acid and is
very corrosive.
61
Appendix 2
volume of liquid/cm3
glacial
ethanoic ethanol ethyl ethanoate
boiling tube HCl (1 mol dm-3) H2O
acid C2H5OH CH3COOC2H5
CH3COOH
A (control) 2 0 0 0 18
B 2 6 6 6 0
C 2 0 6 6 6
D 2 6 0 6 6
E 2 6 6 0 6
2. Stopper the boiling tubes, label them and leave for a week, immersed in a bucket of
water. This will keep the temperature reasonably constant and allow equilibrium to be
achieved.
3. After a week has passed, the reactions in tubes B, C and D need quenching. This
prevents the position of equilibrium from changing any more. Adding water, which makes
the reaction mixture very dilute, does this and stops the catalytic effect of the
hydrochloric acid.
Take 10.0 cm3 from each boiling tube using a pipette and pipette filler. Make each up to
100.0 cm3 in a volumetric flask using deionised water. (Remember to wash the pipette
with a little deionised water and then twice with a very small volume of the liquid in the
boiling tube.)
Label these flasks B, C and D to correspond to the contents of the original boiling tubes.
4. For tube A, pour the entire contents into a 100.0 cm3 volumetric flask and make up to the
100.0 cm3 mark. Wash the boiling tube twice with a little deionised water and transfer the
washings. Label this flask A.
5. From each volumetric flask except A, withdraw 10.0 cm3 using a clean pipette and
pipette filler. Transfer the liquid to a conical flask and add two or three drops of
phenolphthalein indicator. Titrate this with 0.01 mol dm-3 NaOH(aq). Do a rough titration
followed by two accurate readings that agree within 0.1 cm3.
6. Pour the entire contents of volumetric flask A, the solution made up from tube A, into a
250 cm3 conical flask. Rinse the volumetric flask twice with a little deionised water and
transfer the washings to the conical flask. Add phenolphthalein indicator. In this case you
are not going to be able to do a rough titration, so add 0.5 cm3 at a time until the
indicator changes colour.
Stage 1
You need to know how many moles of each reactant you started with. You can calculate this
if you know the density of each liquid as mass = volume x density.
CH3COOH C2H5OH CH3COOC2H5 H2O
density/ g cm-3 1.05 0.79 0.92 1.0
Worked example – tube B, ethanoic acid:
If 6.0 cm3 of ethanoic acid is added, the mass of CH3COOH = 6.0 cm3 x 1.05 g cm–3 = 6.3 g
Mr CH3COOH = 60, therefore mol CH3COOH = 6.3/60 = 0.105 mol
62
Appendix 2
Now draw up a table to record the starting moles for the four liquids for each of the boiling
tubes C, D and E and record the results of your calculations.
Stage 2
Calculate the number of moles of HCl in 2.0 cm3 1 mol dm-3 HCl. In this case you do not
need to use density, as we already know its concentration.
For the contents of tube A, all these moles were titrated against 0.1 mol dm-3 NaOH.
Calculate the volume of NaOH you would expect to add to neutralise the hydrochloric acid
present. This should be the actual volume you used because there was only water and HCl
in the mixture. This is your control and it is used to prove that the concentration of HCl is not
changed by the conditions of the experiment.
Stage 3
There are two neutralisation reactions arising in the titrations from volumetric flasks B, C and
D. The end point is when both acids are neutralised.
CH3COOH(aq) + NaOH(aq) → CH3COONa(aq) + H2O(l)
HCl (aq) + NaOH(aq) → NaCl (aq) + H2O(l)
Remember, every neutralisation reaction can be expressed ionically as:
H+(aq) + OH–(aq) → H2O(l)
(a) For each titration result from flasks B, C, D and E, calculate the number of moles of
H+(aq) present.
(b) Before doing the titrations, you diluted the solutions in the boiling tubes. This was to
quench the equilibrium mixtures. First of all you only pipetted half the 20.0 cm3 of the
equilibrium mixture from the boiling tube into the volumetric flask. Then you only
transferred a tenth of these moles from the volumetric flask into the conical flask. The
result of these two actions means that you must multiply each of your answers in (a) by
20 to give the number of moles H+(aq) in each original equilibrium mixture.
(c) We know from Stage 2 that the moles of H+ due to the catalyst HCl remained
unchanged. Now subtract the number of moles of H+ in each tube from your answer in
(b). You now have the equilibrium moles of ethanoic acid. This amount may be greater
or less than the number of moles you started with.
Stage 4
At this stage you can calculate the moles of each substance present at equilibrium. We will
show how to do this using your results for tube B.
(a) Moles of ethanoic acid present at equilibrium = x mol (this is the value from Stage 3)
These moles have not reacted because they were still in the boiling tube. You started
with 0.105 moles of ethanoic acid. This means that 0.105 − x moles have reacted.
(b) Moles of ethanol at equilibrium = 0.103 – (0.105 – x)
The equation tells us that 1 mole of ethanoic acid reacts with 1 mole of ethanol. So
0.105 – x moles ethanoic acid must have reacted with 0.105 – x ethanol.
Look back at the table you drew up in Stage 1. For tube B you should have calculated a
value of 0.103 for the starting moles of ethanol.
Therefore the number of moles of ethanol at equilibrium is the starting value 0.103
moles, minus the number of moles that have reacted, 0.105 – x moles, i.e. moles of
ethanol at equilibrium = 0.103 – (0.105 – x)
63
Appendix 2
Stage 5
Using the number of moles of each substance at equilibrium in boiling tube B, we can
calculate Kc.
The expression for Kc requires equilibrium concentrations. For the purposes of this
calculation, all four substances are present in the same volume (20 cm3), therefore these
volumes cancel each other out when substituted into the equilibrium expression. So we can
use the number of moles. This is not always the case.
Using your answer to Question 1 in the ‘Background information’ at the start of this sheet,
calculate Kc for tube B.
Work through the stages again to calculate values for Kc for boiling tubes C, D and E and
tabulate your results for equilibrium moles and Kc for each tube.
64
Appendix 2
Learning outcomes
These are printed on the Student Sheet.
A suggested approach
The Student Sheet gives full details of how to carry out the practical. Setting up the
equilibrium mixtures can be done towards the end of a theory lesson about equilibrium
constants. With careful preparation, it is safe and need not take too long. Before this lesson,
fill burettes with each of the five liquids set out in Table 13.1 on the Student Sheet. This
makes handling glacial ethanoic acid much safer for the students. Each student, or group of
students, only needs to prepare one mixture, or two at the most. These are left in a bucket of
water to try to keep the temperature reasonably constant. If you have access to a
thermostatically controlled water bath, so much the better, but this is not essential.
After a week (although 3 days may well suffice), the boiling tube mixtures are at equilibrium,
so the practical lesson is about titrating them to determine the equilibrium concentrations. It
is only necessary for each group to titrate one of the boiling tube mixtures. As a suggestion,
you could always tell students you have titrated tube A for them, since the concentration of
hydrochloric acid remains the same in this control tube.
Technical information
Notes
1. We suggest that one student, or group, makes up one or two of the boiling tube
mixtures.
2. The table on the Student Sheet gives the volumes for each boiling tube.
65
Appendix 2
Safety
The main points are included on the Student Sheet but it is the teacher’s
responsibility to ensure that a full risk assessment is carried out prior to the practical
session. MSDS sheets should be consulted so that the correct action can be taken in
event of a spillage and/or accident.
You are strongly advised to set up the burette containing glacial ethanoic acid
yourself.
Boiling tube C
CH3COOH + C2H5OH ⇌ CH3COOC2H5 + H2O
moles at start 0 0.103 0.0627 0.333
moles at equilibrium x 0.103 + x 0.0627 – x 0.333 – x
Boiling tube D
CH3COOH + C2H5OH ⇌ CH3COOC2H5 + H2O
moles at start 0.105 0 0.0627 0.333
moles at equilibrium x (0.105−x) 0.0627+ (0.105−x) 0.333 + (0.105−x)
Boiling tube E
CH3COOH + C2H5OH ⇌ CH3COOC2H5 + H2O
moles at start 0.105 0.103 0 0.333
moles at equilibrium x 0.103 - (0.105−x) (0.105−x) 0.333 + (0.105−x)
1 Kc =
[CH3 COOC 2H5 ] [H2 O]
[CH3 COOH] [C 2H5 OH]
66
Appendix 2
Background information
When sodium thiosulphate reacts with hydrochloric acid, a precipitate of sulphur forms. The
time taken for a certain amount of sulphur to form is used to measure the reaction rate. The
sodium thiosulphate solution can be heated to different temperatures before hydrochloric
acid is added, so the effect of increasing temperature can be measured.
The effect of temperature increase on this reaction can be predicted using the collision
theory. This theory says that for a reaction to occur, particles must collide with a certain
minimum energy called the activation energy, EA. When temperature is increased, particles
have increased kinetic energy and move around faster. There is therefore an increase in the
frequency of collisions.
Question
1 If sodium thiosulphate solution is heated, predict the effect of increasing the temperature
on the rate of this reaction.
Safety
This reaction produces sulphur dioxide, which is toxic, so ensure good ventilation
or use a fume cupboard. Take care not to inhale the fumes. Asthmatics need to
be particularly careful.
67
Appendix 2
Procedure
1. Measure 10 cm3 of sodium thiosulphate solution and 40 cm3 of water into a conical flask.
2. Measure 5 cm3 of dilute hydrochloric acid in a 10 cm3 measuring cylinder.
3. Warm the thiosulphate solution in the flask to the required temperature, as in Fig. 15.1.
Figure 15.1
4. Put the conical flask over a piece of paper with a cross drawn on it.
5. Add the acid and start timing. Swirl the flask to mix the contents. Take the initial
temperature of the mixture and record it in a table like the one below.
6. Repeat the experiment using different temperatures in the range 15ºC to 65ºC.
Remember that one of your experiments can be carried out at room temperature and so
will not require heating.
7. Look down on the cross from above. When the cross disappears, stop timing and note
the time taken. Record the final temperature of the mixture in the flask.
8. Immediately wash the solution down a sink with plenty of water.
68
Appendix 2
Question
2 What does the graph indicate about the effect of temperature on this chemical reaction?
69
Appendix 2
Learning outcomes
These are printed on the Student Sheet.
A suggested approach
The effect of change of temperature on reaction rate is an everyday experience. Ask
students to consider cooking ingredients to make a cake or the way that milk rapidly goes
sour if it is not kept cold. When introducing this experiment, students will better understand
the procedure if you demonstrate. The experiment can be used as an introduction to collision
theory and there is a little about this in the ‘Background information’ on the Student Sheet. It
can also lead to a discussion of the Boltzmann distribution.
The equation for the reaction is:
S2O32-(aq) + 2H+(aq) → SO2(g) + S(s) +H2O(l)
This is also a useful practical for emphasising graph-drawing skills such as choice of scale
and line of best fit.
Technical information
Requirements per student/group:
Safety
The main points are included on the Student Sheet but it is the teacher’s responsibility to
ensure that a full risk assessment is carried out prior to the practical session. Sulphur
dioxide, which is toxic, is produced in this reaction. A well-ventilated laboratory is essential.
You should also warn asthmatics, as it is preferable for them to use a fume cupboard. If there
is access to a fume cupboard with a sink, use this to wash away the reaction mixture with
plenty of water as soon as the reaction is finished. This is particularly important with solutions
at higher temperatures.
70
Appendix 2
71
Appendix 2
Background information
The Group VII elements are called halogens. They all accept one electron to form a halide
ion.
Cl2 + 2e– → 2Cl –
Questions
1 (a) Write similar half-equations to the one above for bromine and iodine.
(b) Using ideas of electron gain and loss, explain whether these half-equations are
oxidation or reduction reactions.
(c) Using oxidation numbers, explain whether these are oxidation or reduction half-
reactions.
Safety
Procedure
You have three halogen solutions, chlorine water, bromine water and iodine water. You also
have test tubes containing potassium chloride, potassium bromide and potassium iodide.
1. Place a piece of universal indicator paper on a white tile.
72
Appendix 2
2. Use a glass stirring rod to transfer a few drops of the first halogen solution in the table
below onto the indicator paper and repeat with fresh paper for the other two solutions.
Record your results in the table.
3. Add some chlorine solution separately to test tubes containing solutions of potassium
bromide and potassium iodide. Record your observations in the table below.
4. Now mix solutions of bromine with potassium chloride and potassium iodide solutions
and fill in the next row of the table.
5. Repeat using mixtures of iodine solution and potassium chloride and iodine solution and
potassium bromide. Record your results in the table.
chlorine water
bromine water
iodine water
Questions
2 Which halogen solution has the greatest effect on the indicator paper?
3 Write balanced ionic equations for the reactions that occurred between halogen
solutions and halide solutions.
4 Which halogen is the strongest oxidising agent and which halogen is the least oxidising?
Background information
Concentrated sulphuric acid reacts with solid halides to form the corresponding hydrogen
halide.
NaCl(s) + H2SO4(l) → NaHSO4(s) + HCl(g)
The reaction is complicated by the fact that concentrated sulphuric acid is an oxidising agent.
Hydrogen chloride and chloride ions are the most difficult to oxidise and concentrated
sulphuric acid is not a strong enough oxidising agent to oxidise them.
Hydrogen bromide and bromide ions are more easily oxidised.
NaBr(s) + H2SO4(l) → NaHSO4(s) + HBr(g)
2HBr(g) + H2SO4(l) → 2H2O(l) + SO2(g) + Br2(g)
Hydrogen iodide and iodide ions are even more easily oxidised by concentrated sulphuric
acid, and sulphur dioxide, iodine and hydrogen sulphide are all produced.
8HI(g) + H2SO4(l) → H2S(g) + H2O(l) + 4I2(g)
73
Appendix 2
Safety
Procedure
1. Put about five sodium chloride crystals in the bottom of a boiling tube and add five drops
of concentrated sulphuric acid.
2. Test the emerging gas with damp indicator paper and blow across the mouth of the tube.
Record your observations.
3. Using a glass rod, hold a drop of ammonia solution near the mouth of the tube. Again,
record what happens.
4. Repeat Step 1 using a few crystals of potassium bromide or potassium iodide. Test the
gases coming off firstly with filter paper soaked with potassium dichromate(VI)(aq),
which will turn from orange to green in the presence of sulphur dioxide. Write down all
the observations you make about these reactions. Look carefully at the 'Background
information’ to help you identify some of the products.
Questions
5 Write the equation for the production of hydrogen iodide from sodium iodide before it is
oxidised.
6 What are the oxidation numbers of sulphur and chlorine in the first equation in the
‘Background information’ for this experiment?
7 What changes of oxidation number occur for sulphur and bromine in the third equation in
the ‘Background information’?
8 What changes of oxidation number occur in the last equation in the ‘Background
information’?
9 A yellow solid may also be seen in the reaction with sodium iodide. What substance is
this? What does this tell you about the reducing power of iodine?
74
Appendix 2
Learning outcomes
These are printed on the Student Sheet.
A suggested approach
This is a good opportunity to remind students about redox reactions, in terms of change of
oxidation numbers. After the ‘Background information’ to Experiment 1, questions are
provided to test their understanding. Following the necessary safety warnings, the students
could then carry out the reactions. The first task is to consider the bleaching action of the
halogens. This gives a clear indication that chlorine is the most reactive, easily bleaching the
indicator paper. You could, as a summary, explain that the other reactions are called
displacement reactions. As well as discussing the decrease in oxidising power as you
descend Group VII, also mention that the reducing power of the halide ion increases as you
go down the group.
Experiment 2 extends the ideas of redox reactions to the various reactions of halide ions with
concentrated sulphuric acid, which is an oxidising agent. The ‘Background information’ to this
experiment provides some of the theory behind the observations students will make. You will
note that we suggest using very small quantities of the reagents and this should be
reinforced prior to the practical work.
Technical information
Requirements per student/group:
Experiment 1
Potassium chloride solution (0.1 mol dm-3)*
Potassium bromide solution (0.1 mol dm-3)*
Potassium iodide solution (0.1 mol dm-3)*
Chlorine solution (0.05 mol dm-3)* (liberates toxic gas)
Bromine solution (0.05 mol dm-3)*
Iodine solution (0.01 mol dm-3)*
Ammonia solution – e.g. 2 mol dm-3
White tile
Universal indicator paper
Test tubes
Test-tube rack
*It is not necessary for the concentrations of the above solutions to be highly accurate.
Experiment 2
Concentrated sulphuric acid
A few crystals of sodium chloride, potassium bromide and potassium iodide
Filter paper soaked with potassium dichromate(VI) solution
Ammonia solution – e.g. 2 mol dm-3
Universal indicator paper
Boiling tubes
Test-tube rack, able to accommodate boiling tubes
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Appendix 2
Safety
The main points are included on the Student Sheet but it is the teacher’s responsibility to
ensure that a full risk assessment is carried out prior to the practical session. Sulphur dioxide
and chlorine gas may be present in some of these reactions and asthmatics should be
particularly careful not to inhale the vapours. A well-ventilated laboratory is essential. With
iodine and concentrated sulphuric acid, some hydrogen sulphide is produced, which is toxic.
Use of a fume cupboard is advisable.
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Appendix 2
Background information
The demand for petrol is greater than the amount produced by distilling crude oil. Large
hydrocarbon molecules do not have much commercial use and these can be cracked to
produce smaller molecules that can be converted into petrol. The other molecules that are
produced in this reaction are hydrocarbon molecules called alkenes. These are very
important in the synthesis of thousands of organic chemicals on which the world relies. The
smallest alkene molecule is ethene and this is likely to be one of the alkenes present
following a cracking reaction.
The cracking reaction you are going to perform uses a catalyst. The catalyst is able to hold
hydrocarbon molecules on its surface until they are literally shaken apart as the C-C bonds
break.
Safety
and oxidising
Do not allow the water to suck back or the hot test tube will shatter. Using a Bunsen valve
makes suck-back less likely.
Procedure
1. Add a depth of 2 cm of liquid alkane to a test tube and gently push down some mineral
fibre using a stirring rod, allowing the complete absorption of the alkane.
2. Set up the apparatus as shown in Fig. 25.1.
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Appendix 2
Ethene
Water
Figure 25.1
3. Heat the aluminium oxide (or broken porcelain/pumice granules) strongly for a few
minutes, but be careful not to melt the rubber bung. Just flick the Bunsen flame onto the
mineral fibre to ensure you collect a steady stream of bubbles.
4. Discard the first test tube of gas collected, then fill three test tubes with the gas coming
off and stopper them.
5. As soon as the number of bubbles slows down, remove the apparatus from the water to
avoid water being sucked up the delivery tube and cracking the hot test tube.
6. Carry out the following tests and record your results:
(a) What does the gas look like?
(b) What does the gas smell like?
(c) Use a lighted spill to see if the gas burns.
(d) Add two or three drops of dilute, aqueous bromine (the colour should be pale yellow)
and shake. What do you observe?
(e) Add two drops of very dilute (pale pink), acidified potassium manganate(VII). Note
the change of colour.
Questions
1 Why do you need to discard the first test tube of gas collected?
2 Does the gaseous alkene product have the same properties as alkanes?
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Appendix 2
Learning outcomes
These are printed on the Student Sheet.
A suggested approach
Explain that crude oil is a mixture of many hydrocarbons. The gasoline fraction is used for
petrol but the gasoline fraction on its own is not enough. Typically about 40% of the output of
a distillation column may be required as petrol and this is why heavier fractions containing
larger hydrocarbon molecules are cracked.
Students do not require foreknowledge of the properties of alkenes and this is a good linking
experiment to the properties of alkanes.
Technical information
Requirements per student/group:
*The concentration does not have to be accurate but the solution should be a pale yellow
colour.
** The concentration does not have to be accurate but the solution should be a pale pink
colour.
Safety
The main points are included on the Student Sheet but it is the teacher’s responsibility to
ensure that a full risk assessment is carried out prior to the practical session. MSDS sheets
should be consulted so that the correct action can be taken in event of a spillage and/or
accident.
A Bunsen valve can be fitted onto the end of the delivery tube (Fig. 25.2).
Gas
79
Appendix 2
Gas passes through the slit from the inside into the collection tube, but if the pressure drops
inside the delivery tube, the sides of the slit are pushed together so water cannot enter.
However, even with a Bunsen valve fitted, suck-back can still occur so always warn students
to remove the delivery tube from the water if the rate of production of bubbles slows.
Keep checking that melted bungs do not block the delivery tube as an explosion could occur.
80
Appendix 2
Safety
Sodium is corrosive,
and irritant.
Dilute sulphuric acid (1 mol dm-3) is irritant. Bromine water is harmful and
irritant.
and oxidising
81
Appendix 2
Experiment 1. Combustion
Place about 1 cm3 of ethanol on a watch glass and ignite with a lighted spill. Record your
observations.
Question
1 Write an equation for this reaction.
Questions
2 (a) The gas that comes off from this reaction is hydrogen and the other product is
sodium ethoxide (C2H5O-Na+). Write a balanced equation for the reaction of sodium
with ethanol.
(b) Write an equation for the reaction of sodium with water.
Questions
3 (a) What does the colour of the solution suggest about what has happened to the
dichromate(VI) ion?
(b) The new organic compound produced by heating ethanol is ethanal. The ethanal
can be oxidised further to ethanoic acid. In the experiment you have done, this did
not happen because the ethanal boiled off as soon as it was produced. What
apparatus could be used to ensure the ethanal stays in contact with the oxidising
agent?
82
Appendix 2
Figure 28.2
5. Discard the first test tube of gas collected and then collect three tubes of gas. Seal each
with a bung.
6. Lift the whole apparatus out of the water to avoid suck-back as soon as you stop
heating.
7. Light one tube of gas and record your observation.
8. Add two drops of dilute (pale yellow) bromine water to the second tube and shake
gently. Record what you see.
9. Add two drops of very dilute (pale pink), acidified potassium manganate(VII). Note the
change of colour.
Questions
4 (a) Why is the first test tube of gas discarded?
(b) What is the identity of the gas tested?
(c) Write an equation for the dehydration of ethanol.
Question
5 The ester produced is ethyl ethanoate (CH3COOC2H5) and the formula for ethanoic acid
is CH3COOH. Write a balanced equation for this esterification reaction.
83
Appendix 2
Learning outcomes
These are printed on the Student Sheet.
A suggested approach
Ensure at the outset that students understand that they are going to do five experiments that
are potentially hazardous. Take them through the various hazards associated with each of
the compounds they are going to use. The experiments are perfectly safe if instructions are
followed carefully and if students stick to the volumes suggested.
The questions on the Student Sheet are designed to make students consider the reactions
that they observe. The practical session could be followed by a theory lesson explaining what
they have observed.
Technical information
Requirements per student/group:
Ethanol
Sodium (the size of a rice grain)
Sodium dichromate(VI) 0.1 mol dm-3
Dilute sulphuric acid (1 mol dm-3)
If desired, propan-2-ol and 2-methylpropan-2-ol
Aluminium oxide granules – 10 g
Ceramic fibre
Bromine water (0.04 mol dm-3)*
Very dilute, acidified potassium manganate(VII) solution – KMnO4(aq) 0.001 mol dm-3**
(harmful and oxidising)
Concentrated sulphuric acid
Glacial ethanoic acid
Sodium carbonate solution – a spatula measure in 20 cm3 water
Supply of hot (recently boiled) water for water baths
Evaporating basin
Dropper pipettes
250 cm3 beaker
100 cm3 beaker
10 cm3 measuring cylinders
Hard glass test tubes
Hard glass boiling tubes
Test-tube rack
Delivery tube with bung, preferably fitted with a Bunsen valve (see below)
*The concentration does not have to be accurate but the solution should be a pale yellow
colour.
** The concentration does not have to be accurate but the solution should be a pale pink
colour.
Safety
The main points are included on the Student Sheet but it is the teacher’s
responsibility to ensure that a full risk assessment is carried out prior to the practical
session. As for practical 25, using a Bunsen valve minimises the risk of suck-back.
84
Appendix 2
However, this can still occur, so always warn students to remove the delivery tube
from the water if the rate of production of bubbles slows. Keep checking that melted
bungs do not block the delivery tube as an explosion could occur. MSDS sheets should
be consulted so that the correct action can be taken in event of a spillage and/or accident.
85
Teaching AS Chemistry
Practical Skills