Experiment 1 Ska
Experiment 1 Ska
Experiment 1 Ska
LAB REPORT
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY 2
SKA 3023
EXPERIMENT 1
LABORATORY B3-3-MK 13
OBJECTIVES:
INTRODUCTION
Typically, UV-Vis is not the most sensitive spectroscopy technique, because not a lot
of light is absorbed over a short path length. Other spectroscopy techniques such as
fluorescence have higher sensitivity, but they are not as generally applicable, as most
molecules are not fluorescent. UV-Vis has a similar sensitivity to other absorbance
measurements, such as infrared spectroscopy.
A complex of iron (II) is formed with 1,10-phenantroline (Fe(C12H8N2)32+ and the
absorbance of this coloured solution is measured with a UV-Visible spectrometer. The
spectrum is plotted to determine the absorption maximum. Hydroxylamine (as the
hydrochloride salt to in increase solubility) is added to reduce any Fe3+ to Fe 2+
and to
maintain it in that state.
Equation:
MATERIALS
Chemicals
Apparatus
Beaker (100mL), volumetric flask (100mL and 1L), pipette (1,5,10,25 and 50 mL), measuring
cylinder (10mL).
METHODOLOGY
1. Standard iron (II) solution was prepared by weighing 0.0700 g ferrous ammonium
sulfate Fe(NH4)2(SO4)2.6H2O. in 100mL beaker and dissolved in 30 mL distilled
water. The solution is then, quantitatively transferred to a 1L volumetric flask and
sufficient distilled water was added to dissolve the salt. 2.5 mL concentrated sulfuric
acid was added and diluted exactly to the mark with distilled water and mixed
thoroughly.
2. 1,10-phenantroline solution was prepared by dissolving 0.1 g 1,10-phenantroline
monohydrate in 100 ml distilled water in a beaker.
3. Hydroxylamine hydrochloride solution was prepared by dissolving 5g of
hydroxylamine hydrochloride in 50 mL distilled water in a beaker.
4. Sodium acetate solution was prepared by dissolving 10 g of sodium acetate in 100
mL distilled water in a beaker.
1. A series of 100 mL volumetric flasks was added with 1, 5, 10, 25 and 50 mL of the
standard iron solution by using pipettes.
2. In another 100 mL volumetric flask, 50 mL of distilled water is placed for a blank.
3. 10 mL of solution X (unknown sample) is placed into a 100 volumetric flask by using
pipette.
4. 1 mL of the hydroxylamine hydrochloride solution, 10 mL of the 1, 10-phenantroline
solution and 8 mL of the sodium acetate solution were added to each volumetric flask
including the blank and unknown. Distilled water was added until the calibrated mark
and the solution was rested for 15 minutes and was shake once in a while before
making absorbance measurements.
5. Absorbance for the iron (II) solution is measured by using the blank solution as the
reference solution and one of the standard iron (II) solutions prepared in procedure 1
at the wavelength of 400-600 nm. Readings was taken at 20-nm intervals.
6. The graph of absorbance against wavelength was plotted and the maximum
wavelength of the absorption was selected.
7. The absorbance of each standard solutions of the maximum wavelength was
measured and a calibration curve was prepared. The unknown was measured in the
same way.
8. The graph of absorbance of the standards against concentration in ppm was plotted
and the concentration of iron in unknown was determined.
RESULTS
Calculation:
g
0.07 𝑔 Fe(NH4)2(SO4)2.6H2O × 1000mg × 55.845
𝑚𝑔 𝐹𝑒 𝑚𝐿 −1
= mol
1000 𝑚𝑙 × 1𝑔 × 392.14 𝑔 Fe(NH4)2(SO4)2.6H2O
= 9.97 𝑚𝑔 𝐹𝑒 𝑚𝐿−1
400 0.318
420 0.356
440 0.448
460 0.514
480 0.585
500 0.614
505 0.627
510 0.634
515 0.624
520 0.591
540 0.312
560 0.103
580 0.036
600 0.009
Absorbance (A) against ʎ (nm)
0.7
0.65
0.6
0.55
0.5
0.45
Absorbance (A)
0.4
0.35
0.3
0.25
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.05
0
400 410 420 430 440 450 460 470 480 490 500 510 520 530 540 550 560 570 580 590 600
ʎ (nm)
0.6
0.5
Absorbance (A)
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5
Concentration ( × 10-3 mg Fe mL-1)
M1V1 = M2V2
(X)(10mL) = (100ml)(1 x 10-3 𝑚𝑔 𝐹𝑒 𝑚𝐿−1 )
X= 0.01 𝑚𝑔 𝐹𝑒 𝑚𝐿−1
In this experiment the concentration of iron in unknown solution can be know from
calibration curve. We must know the maximum wavelength of absorbance to prepare the
calibration curve. Hence, we perform absorbance for the iron solution chosen at the
wavelength of 400-600 nm by using the concentration of fe(II) standard solution of 4.985 x
103 mg Fe mL-1. From the curve of absorbance of ferum-1,10-phenantroline complex against
wavelength we obtained the highest absorbance which is 0.634 A at 510 nm. Now we are
able to perform calibration curve to determine the concentration Fe(II) of the unknown by
using maximum wavelength obtained which is 510 nm. In this experiment, we used blank
solution as reference solution. The calibration curve is absorbance of the standard against
the concentration of Fe (II) in ppm. From this plot and the absorbance of unknown we will
find the concentration of iron of the stock solution by the calculation,
M1V1 = M2V2
Where,
V2 = 100 mL
The concentration iron in unknown solution is determined by the calibration curve in which
from y-axis of absorbance (A) at 0.206 A down to the x-axis to get the concentration iron of
the unknown at 1.00 x 10-3 mg Fe mL-1.
CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
Schwartz, L.M. “Advances in Acid-Base Gran Plot Technology,” J. Chem. Educ., 64,
947-950 (1987).
Christian, G.D., Analytical Chemistry, 6th edition. New Jersey. John Wiley, 2004.
Filby, G. “Spreadsheets for Chemists,” VCH Publishers, New York, 1995, p. 210.
QUESTIONS
2. Identify factors that cause the Beer’s Law relationship to depart from linearlity?
Gravimetric errors – eg. mood
Incomplete spectral resolution – due to wrong slit width selection
Turbidity – must filter the sample first to avoid cloudy
Aggregation at high concentration – the particles stick together
Contamination of cuvettes – must clean the cuvettes immediately after using
3. Calculate the frequency in hertz and the energy in joules of an X-ray photon
with a wavelength of 2.70Å (1eV = 1.062 J)
Frequency:
𝑐
𝑣=
ʎ
3 × 108 𝑚𝑠 −1
𝑣=
2.7 × 10−10 𝑚
𝑣 = 1.11 × 1018 𝑠 −1
Energy:
𝐸 = ℎ𝑣
𝐸 = 6.62 × 10−34 𝐽𝑠 × 1.11 × 1018 𝑠 −1
𝐸 = 7.35 × 10−16 𝐽
There are three main processes by which a molecule can absorb radiation.
and each of these routes involves an increase of energy that is proportional to the
light absorbed. The first route occurs when absorption of radiation leads to a higher
rotational energy level in a rotational transition. The second route is a vibrational
transition which occurs on absorption of quantized energy. This leads to an increased
vibrational energy level. The third route involves electrons of molecules being raised
to a higher electron energy, which is the electronic transition. It’s important to state
that the energy is quantized and absorption of radiation causes a molecule to move
to a higher internal energy level. This is achieved by the alternating electric field of
the radiation interacting with the molecule and causing a change in the movement of
the molecule. There are multiple possibilities for the different possible energy levels
for the various types of transitions.
The energy levels can be rated in the following order: electronic > vibrational
> rotational. Each of these transitions differs by an order of magnitude. Rotational
transitions occur at lower energies (longer wavelengths) and this energy is
insufficient and cannot cause vibrational and electronic transitions but vibrational
(near infra-red) and electronic transitions (ultraviolet region of the electromagnetic
spectrum) require higher energies.
The energy of IR radiation is weaker than that of visible and ultraviolet
radiation, and so the type of radiation produced is different. Absorption of IR radiation
is typical of molecular species that have a small energy difference between the
rotational and vibrational states. A criterion for IR absorption is a net change in dipole
moment in a molecule as it vibrates or rotates.
5. You had prepared a blank solution in step 2. Discuss the characteristics of the
blank solution in this experiment.
Contain no analyte of interest
Used to calibrate the spectrophotometer readings