Chemistry Olympiad: Final Competition 2018
Chemistry Olympiad: Final Competition 2018
Chemistry Olympiad: Final Competition 2018
Chemistry Olympiad
Final competition 2018
Theoretical tasks and solutions
TASK 1
An interesting example of an almost insoluble salt of a weak, diprotic acid is PbCO3. Negative
logarithm of the solubility product constant for this salt is equal to 12.8, while negative logarithms of
dissociation constants of the carbonic acid are equal to pKa1 = 6.4 and pKa2 = 10.3. The solubility of
this salt depends also on a reaction that can be written down in a simplified form as::
1
Problems:
d. Derive the equation for the solubility product constant of the PbCO3 taking into account the
different acid-base equilibria for both anions and cations.
e. Calculate the solubility of that salt in water (pH = 7.0) and compare it to the solubility of that
salt calculated without taking into account the acid-base equilibria.
TASK 2
4
The experiments were carried out at t = 30.85 °C. The density of toluene at this temperature is
d = 0.8566 g∙cm−3 and it can be assumed that the density of polymer solutions is the same. Due to the
very small diameter of the capillaries in the arms of the osmometer, we omit the effect of diluting the
solution with a solvent passing through the semi-permeable membrane; the h values given in Table 1
are already corrected for the capillarity effect.
Note: benzoyl peroxide is decomposed to benzene during the reaction; in osmometric measurements,
it can be assumed that the molecules of styrene and toluene are of the same size.
In the calculations, take the following values of molar masses (g∙mol−1): C – 12.010, H – 1.008; the
value of the gravitational acceleration is g = 9.81 m/s2.
Problems:
a. For all four given solutions calculate the concentration, c in g∙dm−3, of polymer and the osmotic
pressure π, determined in individual measurements. Put the results into Table 2 in the solutions
sheet.
b. Using the grates in sheets, make a plot of the calculated dependence π(c) inserting also the point
at c = 0. Note: on the scale with resolution 1 you can insert points with a precision of ± 0.1.
c. From the equation describing the dependence of π(c), drive the formula for the dependence of the
molecular weight, M, of the polymer on π, c and T.
d. Calculate the molecular weight Mi of the polymer at each of the four experiments and insert the
results in Table 2 on the first page of the solution sheet.
e. Find the function f(M), which is a linear function of the concentration c and allows for an
extrapolation of f(M) to c = 0. Calculate the values of function f(Mi) for each individual
concentration of polystyrene and place them in Table 2.
Note: analysis of the results have shown that the dependence of the osmotic pressure of polystyrene
solutions on their concentration has the form: π(c) = A∙c + B∙c2.
f. Similarly to the b., plot the calculated values of f(Mi) as a function of the concentration c. Draw the
straight line as close as possible to all points and extrapolate this linear dependence to the
concentration c = 0.
g. From the two most distant points on the graph of f(M) plotted as a function of the concentration
c (plot from f.), calculate the parameters "a" and "b" of the straight line approximating
experimental points and used for extrapolation to the concentration c = 0. Calculate the value of
function f(M) for c = 0 and the resulting mean value of the average molecular mass, Mav, of
polystyrene.
Hint: instead of calculating the parameters of the straight line through the two chosen points, you
can apply for all four points the linear regression function available in the calculator.
5
h. Calculate the degree of polystyrene polymerization as the ratio of the calculated average molecular
weight of polystyrene Mav to the molecular weight of the monomer Mm. Calculate the extent of the
reaction, λ, achieved in the system at the moment of "freezing" of the polymerization reaction.
Note: the extent of reaction, λ, is defined as the ratio of the number of moles of substrate or product
that has been used or produced in the reaction till the moment when the reaction is stopped to the
appropriate stoichiometric coefficient:
λ = (nz − n0)/z
where: nz - number of moles of the particular reactant z at the moment of stopping the reaction,
n0 - initial number of moles of the reactant (for the product n0 = 0), z - stoichiometric coefficient of
the reactant (for the substrate a negative value should be taken).
TASK 4
Compound: A B, B1, B2 C D, D1 D2 E F G H I X
Number of signals in
13 4 7 5 7 4 2 2 6 9 13 16
C NMR spectra
1
H NMR spectra (in CDCl3): Signals in the range of 0-5 ppm are present only for compounds B,
D1, D2, F and X.
I) Compounds A and B are hydrocarbons having the same composition. They contain 93.5% of
carbon, and the molecular mass do not exceed 200 g∙mol−1. A and B do not decolourise bromine
water, however react with bromine in the presence of iron. Moreover, only B can be oxidized when
heated with Na2Cr2O7 or KMnO4 solutions, to form products B1 and B2 with molecular mass of 198
and 216 g∙mol−1 respectively.
a. Determine molecular formula of hydrocarbons A and B.
b. Draw the structures of hydrocarbons A and B.
c. Draw the structures of compounds B1 and B2.
6
II) Compounds C and D have a molecular weight of 122 g∙mol−1 and beside carbon and hydrogen
contains also oxygen (26.2%). They can be easily separated by extraction of C with diluted solution
of NaOH. Compound C also reacts with thionyl chloride to form C1. Reaction of D with NaBH4, and
selective reduction with hydrogen on palladium catalyst leads to achiral product D1 with molecular
weight of 126 g∙mol−1. In 1H NMR spectra of D1 there are three multiplets with relative intensity
1:1:1 in the range of 6-7.5 ppm. Further reduction of D1 with hydrogen on nickel catalyst with acid
additive resulted in formation of product with molecular weight of 130 g∙mol−1 and D2 with 128
g∙mol−1. The 13C NMR spectra of D2 shows four peaks, and at proton spectrum only signals with
chemical shifts below 5 ppm are present. In addition, compounds D reacts with cyclopenta-1,3-diene.
d. Determine molecular formula of compounds C and D.
e. Draw the structures of compounds C and C1.
f. Draw the structures of compounds D, D1 and D2.
III) Compounds E and F exhibit basic properties, and beside carbon and hydrogen contains 41.2% mas.
and 25.9% mas. of nitrogen respectively. They molecular masses do not exceed 130 g∙mol−1, and 13C
NMR spectra shows only two signals for each compound. Moreover, E is also a weak acid (slightly
stronger then water), and reacts with 2 moles of C1 in the presence of NaOH solution with ring
opening and formation of product G and simple carboxylic acid salt. G contains 10.5% of nitrogen
and has a molecular weight of 266 g∙mol−1. Compound F heated with excess of B1 forms product H
with molecular weight of 468 g∙mol−1, which has no basic properties.
g. Determine molecular formula of compounds E and F.
h. Draw the structures of compounds E and F.
i. Draw the structures of compounds G and H.
IV) Compounds A, C and E were utilized in the synthesis of antifungal drug X, illustrated at the
scheme:
E
SOCl2 A 1) NaBH4 (excess)
C C1 I J X
AlCl3 2) SOCl2
7
TASK 5
Fig.1
The starting point for the synthesis of amino acid X was natural proteinogenic aromatic amino acid A.
Amino acid A subjected to a mixture of concentrated nitric and sulfuric acid gave para-substituted
derivative B. Derivative B was treated with di-tetr-butyl dicarbonate to yield compound C. Compound C
was reacted with hydrogen on a palladium catalyst to give compound D (M=280,32 g∙mol-1). Compound
D reacts with compound K leading to derivative E. A by-product of this reaction is volatile compound
with pungent odour. Derivative E is deprotected under acidic conditions to yield amino-acid X
(M=274,28 g∙mol-1).
Fig.2
The first step of the synthesis of compound K (mol. Formula C4H6N4S) is refluxing thiohydrocarbazide in
methanol, to yield monomethylated derivative J (Fig. 2). Condensation of derivative J with
trimethylacetate in ethanol, in the presence of triethylamine, followed by addition of sodium nitrite in the
presence of acid as a mild oxidant, leads to compound K as the main product. Compound K is a cyclic,
aromatic compound, which does not undergo dimerization in the presence of mild oxidants. In the proton
8
NMR spectrum of compound K there are two signals (singlets od equal intensities, for both δH is below 4
ppm) and in the carbon spectrum there are 4 signals.
Fig.3
Aminoacid X was added to growth medium, in which genetically engineered E.coli strain was cultured.
The bacteria incorporated single amino acid X into GFP-1 protein that they expressed. Such modified
GFP-1 protein did not emit light (was non-fluorescent; Fig. 3). Next, compound Y was added to the
bacterial culture. Just after 1 minute fluorescence of the bacteria was observed, indicating that a rapid
chemical reaction occurred with participation of the modified GFP-1 protein. The first step of this reaction
is [4+2] cycloaddition between amino acid X present in the protein and compound Y, leading to the
formation of GFP-2 adduct that contains a modified amino acid Z’. GFP-2 protein spontaneously
converts into GFP-3 that contains amino acid Z, and a non-toxic gas is released during this process.
MALDI-MS analysis revealed that conversion of GFP-1 into GFP-3 results in a change of protein
molecular mass by 124 g∙mol-1. The structure of compound Y, not showing its stereochemistry, is
depicted in Fig. 3. The double bond in compound Y has E configuration, and one of the substituents in the
cyclopropane ring has configuration trans relative to other substituents. Finally, catalytic hydrogenation of
compound Y leads to mezo compound.
Problems:
a. Draw structural formula for compounds B, C, and D. You do not need to show the
stereochemistry.
b. Draw structural formula for compounds E, K, and X. You do not need to show the
stereochemistry.
c. Draw the structural formula of Y clearly showing its stereochemistry.
d. Draw a scheme for the reaction between protein GFP-1 and compound Y. In your scheme, use
skeletal formula of amino acids Z and Z’ (you do not need to show stereochemistry). Depict
the protein schematically in such way that amino acid X is fully shown, including the peptide
bonds it engages in. N-terminal part of the protein label as R1 and C-terminal as R2. If you
cannot draw the protein, draw the same reaction for the free amino acid X Draw the structure
of appropriate isomer of chloronicotinic acid, oxidation product of compound X.
9
e. Rapid reaction between amino acid X and compound Y is ensured by the presence of double
bond of E-configuration in compound Y. This is related to (choose one answer):
A. Steric hindrance
B. Electronic effects
C. Angular strain
D. Lack of interactions with the hydroxyl group
f. Reaction between compounds X and Y is often called inverse electron demand Diels-Alder reaction
(iEDDA). This is because:
g. The Diels-Alder reaction is usually reversible. What makes the reaction analyzed in this problem
irreversible, especially, at low reagent concentrations present in the living cells?
10
Solutions of theoretical Tasks
SOLUTION OF TASK 1
a.
H2X ⇄ HX− + H+ pKa1 = 10.0
HX-⇄ X2− + H+ pKa2 = 13.0
Ka1 and Ka2 dissociation constants are defined as:
Ka1 = [HX−][H+] / [H2X]
Ka2 = [X2−][H+] / [HX−]
and the total concentration of H+ ions [H+]c is equal to the concentration of both stages of dissociation:
[H+]c = [H+]1 + [H+]2
[H+]1 can be calculated on the basis of the first step of dissociation solving the quadratic equation:
[H+]12 + Ka1·[H+]1 – Ka1·c = 0
And finally:
11
If the difference between [H+]1 and [H+]2 concentration values is large (meaning that Ka2 is a lot
smaller than [H+]1 or Ka2 is a lot smaller than Ka1), which we can note as [H+]1 + [H+]2 ≈ [H+]1 then
Ka2 ≈ [H+]2,
so:
[H+]c = [H+]1 + [H+]2 ≈ [H+]1 + Ka2
and finally:
[H+]c = 3.1·10−6 mol∙dm−3+ 10−13 mol∙dm−3 ≈ 3.1·10−6 mol∙dm−3
pH = 5.5
b.
MX ⇄ M2+ + X2−
KS0 = [M2+][X2−]
In the absence of ions of insoluble salt we can note that:
[M2+] = S and [X2−] = S, to yield KS0 = S2
S = (KS0)1/2
X2− ion is, however, a weak base described by the following equilibria:
H2X ⇄ HX−+ H+ pKa1 = 10.0
− 2− +
HX ⇄ X + H pKa2 = 13.0
12
𝑺
𝑲𝑺𝟎 = 𝑺 ·
[𝐇 + ] [𝐇 + ]𝟐
𝟏+ +
𝑲𝐚𝟐 𝑲𝐚𝟏 𝑲𝐚𝟐
c. Using the equation derived above at pH = 7.0 we get:
𝑆 −3
10−3
𝐾𝑆0 = 𝑆 · ( ) = 10 · ( ) = 𝟏𝟎−𝟏𝟓
[H + ] [H + ]2 10−7 (10−7 )2
1+ + 1 + −13 + −10 −13
𝐾a2 𝐾a1 𝐾a2 10 10 10
d. Using the same equation at pH = 6.0 we get:
𝑆 −2
10−2
𝐾𝑆0 =𝑆·( + + 2 ) = 10 · ( −6 2 ) = 𝟏𝟎−𝟏𝟓
[H ] [H ] 10 −6 (10 )
1+ + 1 + −13 + −10 −13
𝐾a2 𝐾a1 𝐾a2 10 10 10
e. For anions all equation were already derived above. In the case of M2+ cation we find the
following equilibrium:
Pb2+ + H2O ⇄ Pb(OH)+ + H+ pKa = 7.9
Ka = [Pb(OH)+][H+] / [Pb2+] czyli [Pb(OH)+] = Ka·[Pb2+] / [H+]
Since lead ions exist in two forms, the molar solubility is equal to the sum of their concentrations:
[Pb2+] + [Pb(OH)+] = S
Using this equation we get:
[Pb2+ ]𝐾a 𝐾a
𝑆 = [Pb2+ ] + = [ Pb2+ ]
(1 + )
[H + ] [H + ]
𝑆
[Pb2+ ] =
𝐾a
(1 + )
[H + ]
For anions we have:
[H2X] + [HX−] + [X2−] = S
To finally yield:
2− ]
[X 2− ][H+ ] [X 2− ][H+ ]2 2−
[H + ] [H+ ]2
𝑆 = [X +( )+( ) = [X ] (1 + + )
𝐾a2 𝐾a1 𝐾a2 𝐾a2 𝐾a1 𝐾a2
𝑆
[X 2− ] =
[H + ] [H+ ]2
1+ +
𝐾a2 𝐾a1 𝐾a2
13
Using the equation derived for the concentrations of M2+ and X2- ions we can write the final equation
for the solubility product constants as:
𝑆 𝑆
𝐾𝑆0 = ·
𝐾a [H+ ]
[H + ]2
1+ 1 + +
[H + ] 𝐾a2 𝐾a1 𝐾a2
f. Using the equation derived above we get:
𝐾𝑆0
𝑆2 =
𝐾 [H + ] [H+ ]2
(1 + a+ ) (1 + + )
[H ] 𝐾a2 𝐾a1 𝐾a2
2
10−12,8
𝑆 = = 4.4 · 10−8
10−7.9 10−7 10−14
(1 + ) (1 + −10.3 + −6.4 −10.3 )
10−7 10 10 10
S = 2.1·10-5 mol∙dm−3
Without using the acid-base equilibria for ions the solubility of that salt in water would be equal to:
S = (KS0)1/2 = 4·10−7 mol∙dm−3
SOLUTION OF TASK 2
a. X – hydrogen, H2
b. The structural formula of tert-butyl alcohol:
OH
All methyl groups rotate freely around the C−C bond axis at room temperature in solution and
hydroxyl group also rotates around the C−O bond. Consequently, all methyl group protons are
equivalent and there is only one signal (singlet) coming from them in the 1H NMR spectrum.
Similarly methylene groups of 18C6 crown ether also rotate freely in solution at room
temperature and all protons in the 18C6 molecule are equivalent and give rise to one signal (also
singlet).
When t-BuOH and 18C6 are mixed in a 1:1: molar ratio, the molar ratio of methyl group protons
of t-BuOH and 18C6 ether protons equals (1 ∙ 9)a : (1 ∙ 24) = 0,375. This ratio is equal to the
intensity ratio of respective signals in the 1H NMR spectrum.
a
– the number of moles of a particular compound multiplied by the number of equivalent nuclei
of a given type
c. It follows from the information concerning the 1H NMR spectra for samples resulting from
compounds A and B dissolution in water that they consist of caesium and 18C6 crown ether only.
14
One may calculate the amount of crown ether in the sample of compounds A and B basing on the
intensity ration of the signals coming from tert-butyl alcohol protons and crown ether protons.
There is 1.0 mmol of tert-butyl alcohol i.e. 9.0 mmol of methyl group protons in the analysed
solution. Given that the signal intensity ratio is 0.826, there are 0.826 ∙ 9.0 = 7.43 mmol of crown
ether protons in 123 mg of compound A. One 18C6 crown ether molecule contains 24 protons.
Therefore, 123 mg of compound A contains 7.43 / 24 = 0.310 mmol of 18C6 ether. The 18C6
ether molar mass of the formula C12H24O6 equals 264.31 g∙mol−1 which indicated that 123 mg of
compound A contains 0.310 mmol ∙ 264.31 g∙mol−1 = 81.9 mg of 18C6 ether and 41.1 mg of
caesium which amount to 0.309 mmol.
Thus, the Cs:18C6 molar ratio is 0.309 mmol : 0.310 mmol ≈ 1:1 and the empirical (sum) formula
of compound A is Cs(18C6) or Cs(C12H24O6).
In case of compound B analysis there is also 9.0 mmol tert-butyl alcohol methyl group protons in
the solution, but there are 9.0 ∙ 1.11 = 9.99 mmol of 18C6 ether methylene group protons which
amounts to 9.99 / 24 = 0.416 mmol of 18C6 ether. Such an amount of ether weighs 0.416 mmol ∙
264.31 g∙mol−1= 110 mg. There are 28 mg of caesium in 138 mg of compound B.
Therefore, the Cs:18C6 molar ratio is 0.211 mmol : 0.416 mmol ≈ 1:2 and the empirical (sum)
formula of compound B is Cs(18C6)2 or Cs(C12H24O6)2.
Any other correct reasoning allowing for the unequivocal determination of compounds A and B
empirical formulae will receive maximum number of points.
d. In the course of compound B analysis 2.59 mL of hydrogen were evolved. The number of moles of
hydrogen can be calculated using Clapeyron equation:
𝑝𝑉
𝑝𝑉 = 𝑛𝑅𝑇 ⇒ 𝑛 =
𝑅𝑇
100000 Pa ∙ 2.59 ∙ 10−6 m3
𝑛= = 0.104 mmol
8.3145 J ∙ mol−1 ∙ K −1 ∙ 298.15 K
Hydrogen is formed as a result of hydronium cations reduction which proceeds according to the
following half reaction:
2H2O + 2e− → H2 + 2OH−
0.208 mmol of electrons had to react for 0.104 mmol of gaseous hydrogen to be formed. This
indicates that there is 0.208 mmol/0.211 mmol = 1,0 mol of electrons per 1 mol of caesium in
compound B. Moreover, the presence of only one peak in the 133Cs NMR spectrum indicates that
there is only one kind of caesium nuclei in this compound and the information about the
paramagnetic properties of compound B shows that it contains unpaired electrons. One may,
therefore, conclude that compound B contains caesium cations complexed by the crown ether:
15
Cs(18C6)+2 lub Cs(C12 H24 O6 )+2 ) and electrons e− instead of anions. Compound B is an electride
with formula [Cs(18C6)+2 , e−].
Analogously, in case of compound A analysis 3.84 mL of hydrogen were formed. This amounts to
100000 Pa ∙ 3.84 ∙ 10−6 m3
𝑛= = 0.155 mmol
8.3145 J ∙ mol−1 ∙ K −1 ∙ 298.15 K
Here 0.310 mmol of electrons had to react for such an amount of hydrogen to be evolved. This
means that there is 0.310 mmol / 0.309 mmol = 1.0 mol of electrons per 1 mol of caesium in
compound A. Compound A is paramagnetic which indicates that all electrons are paired therein.
There are two signals in the 133Cs NMR spectrum. One must come from nuclei of caesium cations
complexed by crown ether: Cs(18C6)+2 (or Cs(C12 H24 O6 )+2 ). The second one comes from caesium
nuclei in a different chemical environment. Given that there are electron pairs in the compound,
one may conclude that there is one electron pair per one such caesium atomic core. Thus, the
second signal comes from caeside anions Cs−. In the compound A structure there are no free
electron pairs instead of anions, because there is a second signal in the 133Cs NMR spectrum in
addition to the signal coming from cations. The signal stemming from caeside anions is displaced
relative to the signal coming from Cs(18C6)+2 cations because the electron pair is localised on the
6s orbital which implies non-zero probability of finding these electrons on the caesium nucleus of
the caeside anion. Summing up, compound A is not an electride but a salt with formula
[Cs(18C6)+2 , Cs− ].
This is an example of quite a big group of alkali metal alkalides obtained using a series of
complexing agents forming stable chelates with these metal cations.
e. The reaction of compound A with water:
16
The following equations are also correct:
or:
2Cs(C12H24O6)(s) + 2H2O(l) → 2CsOH(aq) + 2C12H24O6(aq) + H2(g)
2Cs(C12H24O6)2(s) + 2H2O(l) → 2CsOH(aq) + 4C12H24O6(aq) + H2(g)
f. Gold(III) cations are reduced by caeside anions to metallic gold according to the following
equation:
or
2AuCl3(ether) + 6Cs(C12H24O6)(ether) → 2Au(ether) + 3Cs(C12H24O6)2Cl(ether) + 3CsCl(ether)
or another equivalent equation.
Using this method one may obtain metal nanoparticles with diameters ranging from 1 to 19 nm.
SOLUTION OF TASK 3
Table 2:
1 2 3 4
c (g∙dm−3) 7.304 5.478 3.652 1.826
a. From the mass of the post-reaction mixture contained in V = 100 cm3 of the solution and knowing the
ratio of the polymer mass to the mass of the reaction mixture we calculate the concentration c:
c = m∙3.456∙/(V∙5.678). (1)
An osmotic pressure, π, in the present experiments is a hydrostatic pressure of the solution column
raised in a capillary of the osmometr to the height h. We use the formula:
π = d∙g∙h (2)
where: d - density of the solution at a given temperature (here, the density of toluene), g - acceleration
of gravity, and h - difference in levels of the liquid column in the arms of the osmometer. The
calculated values of c and π (after conversion of units) are inserted in Table 2 above.
17
It should be noted that the unreacted molecules of styrene present in the solution (as well as the
negligible amount of benzene produced in decomposition of benzoyl peroxide) will behave like
toluene (solvent) due to their very close molecular sizes. In these measurements they behave as the
substances which are not osmotically active and do not contribute to the measured osmotic
pressure. The osmotic pressure measured is solely due to the presence of large polymer molecules.
18
M−1 = a + b∙c , (7)
where: a = A/R∙T and b = B/R∙T .
The function we were looking for is f(M) = M−1(c). We calculate the inverse values of Mi and
place them in Table 2.
f. We make a graph f(M) = M−1(c). The calculated points show a linear dependence on the
concentration of polystyrene. We extrapolate a straight line through experimental points to the
value of M−1(c = 0), as shown in Figure 2 below.
Fig. 2. Dependence of the inverse "apparent" molecular weight 1/M(c) on the concentration of
polystyrene
g. The equation of the straight line calculated with a least squares method has the form:
M−1 = a + b∙c (8)
and the parameters of this equation are: a = 0.5033∙10−5 mol∙g−1 and b = 0.1553∙10−5 mol∙g−1∙K−1.
The value of M−1 at the concentration c = 0 is equal to the constant „a”, which gives the average
value of the actual molecular weight of polystyrene equal to:
Mav = 198700 g∙mol−1.
The straight line calculated from the two extreme points In Fig. 2 has the parameters a = 0.5025∙10−5
mol∙g−1 i b = 0.1538∙10−5 mol∙g−1∙K−1. The reciprocal of the "a" parameter gives an average
molecular weight of 199000 g∙mol−1. The small difference between these two calculations
indicates good linearity M−1(c).
h. The reaction of polymerization can be written as:
C8H8 + 2 H* → H−(C8H8)−H
The molecular weight of styrene is Mm = 104.144 g∙mol−1. The degree of styrene polymerization is
therefore:
19
= Mav/Mm = 198700/104.144 ≈ 1908
The extent of the reaction, λ, we calculate from the definition taking into account the number of
moles of styrene, which has reacted until the reaction was frozen:
SOLUTION OF TASK 4
a. Molecular formula of A and B – C12H10
b. and c.
O O O
CO2H CO2H
(biphenyl) (acenaphthene)
A B B1 B2
d. Molecular formula of C and D – C7H6O2
e. and f.
CO2H
CHO
O
(benzoic acid) ((E)-3-(2-furyl)acrolein)
C D (or isomerZ)
COCl O
OH
O O
C1 D1 D2
20
g. Molecular formula of E – C3H4N2 Molecular formula of F – C6H8N2
h.
N NH2
N (1,4-diaminobenzene)
H (imidazole) H2N
E F
i.
O O
N N
N N
H H
O O O O
G
H
(or isomer-E)
j.
N
Cl
O
N
I J X (Bifonazole)
SOLUTION OF TASK 5
a. i b.
21
c.
d.
e. C.
f. B.
g. The irreversibility of the reaction ensures spontaneous conversion of the Z 'adduct present in
GFP-2 into the Z adduct present in GFP-3 with the disconnection of the volatile N2 molecule,
which shifts the equilibrium towards the final product (Z).
22
64 Chemistry Olympiad
Final competition 2018
Practical tasks and solutions
TASK 1
Malonyl dichloride purity determination
Acyl chlorides are synthesised in the substitution reaction of hydroxyl group by chloride ions. The
reaction involves heating an acid with thionyl chloride and proceeds according to the following
equation:
RCOOH + SOCl2 RCOCl + SO2 + HCl
The final product may be contaminated with the unreacted organic acid or with hydrochloric acid. The
potentiometric titration curve of an acetone-aqueous solution containing the products of pure malonyl
dichloride (propanedioic acid dichloride) hydrolysis with a standard sodium hydroxide solution is
shown in the figure.
You receive a 200-mL volumetric flask denoted with letter P with a solution of technical malonyl
dichloride in water. Malonyl dichloride is highly hygroscopic which makes it difficult to prepare a
precisely weighed amount of it.
You have a standard solution of hydrochloric acid at your disposal with the concentration given on the
bottle and sodium hydroxide solution with a concentration of ca. 0.1 mol∙L−1. There is also burette
23
with a funnel, 25-mL volumetric pipette, two Erlenmeyer flasks, two beakers and graduated cylinder
on your table.
All the participants have methyl orange and phenolphthalein at their disposal.
The data for a few points from a conductometric titration of a sample with an identical composition as
yours have been given in a table on your answer sheet. The titrant concentration was exactly the same
as that of yours.
REMARK: Assume that the sample of technical malonyl dichloride contains only one substance
treated as a contamination.
Problems:
a. Using the potentiometric titration curve and your knowledge in organic chemistry, write down the
names of the substances present in the titrated solution. Write down the equation of malonyl
dichloride hydrolysis.
b. Determine the sodium hydroxide solution concentration with a precision of four significant digits
using the given procedure. Justify your choice of indicator.
c. Using the available glassware and substances determine the total number of acids’ millimoles
in the flask P expressing it as the amount of hydronium ions.
d. Sketch the conductometric titration curve using the data given in the table on your answer
sheet. Determine the equations of lines corresponding to the titration of particular components
and find the lines’ intersection point. Calculate the number of millimoles of the substances in
flask P.
e. Basing on the results of titration answer what was the contamination in the malonyl dichloride
sample. Determine the millimoles number of the contaminant in flask P.
f. Calculate the weight percentage of malonyl dichloride in the hydrolysed sample.
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TASK 2
Solvent composition influence on solution’s colour. Spectrophotometric determination of water
Thiocyanate anions form coloured complexes with ions such as Fe(III), Co(II), Mo(V) and others.
Identification of cobalt(II) is an interesting case. Blue cobalt(II) complex is formed in aqueous
solutions for high concentrations of added thiocyanate anions. The method’s sensitivity depends on
the thiocyanate ions concentration. Introduction of acetone to the solution greatly increases the
reaction sensitivity. For low thiocyanate ion concentration aqueous solution is practically colourless
and the addition of acetone gives rise to intense blue colour. This testifies to the significant influence
of the solvent on the colour intensity (solvatochromism). Similar phenomena can be observed for
cobalt(II) chloride.
In the attached figures (attachment to problem 2) there are absorption spectra of:
- anhydrous cobalt(II) chloride solutions in ethanol with variable water content
- anhydrous cobalt(II) chloride solutions in ethanol with variable methanol content at room
temperature and after heating (og)
- thiocyanate cobalt(II) complex solutions in a mixture of acetone and ethanol (1:1) with
variable water content
- CI 42051 dye solutions in ethanol with variable water content
The influence of hydrochloric acid addition to the solutions on the spectra is also shown.
The following solutions are placed in ampoules denoted 1, 2 and 3: cobalt(II) chloride in ethanol,
thiocyanate cobalt(II) complex in ethanol-acetone mixture and CI 42051 dye in ethanol.
There is a vegetable sample in ampoule denoted S which contains water and ethanol. Sample mass
(without ethanol) is given on the ampoule. There is a sample of ethanol-acetone mixture containing
water in the graduated test tube denoted R.
You have the following solvents at your disposal: denatured anhydrous ethanol, methanol and
ethanol-acetone mixture. There are also a beaker, stirring rod, small funnel with filter paper, 25-mL
volumetric flask, 5 mL graduated pipette, test tube with a stopper, six test tubes and 6 polyethylene
Pasteur pipettes.
Attention! All the operations in this problem have to be carried out using dry glassware. Wet
glassware should be washed with denatured anhydrous ethanol.
Problems
a. Basing on the information from absorption spectra given in the attachment and at least two
experiments, identify the solutions in ampoules 1, 2 and 3.
b. Prepare a calibration curve for the relative absorbance decrease of a thiocyanate cobalt(II)
complex solution in water-ethanol-acetone mixture as a function of water content in the
25
solution (use the given procedure). Determine the range in which the function is linear and find
the line equation. Repeat this for cobalt(II) chloride solution in ethanol.
c. Determine the method sensitivity and its quantification limit, assuming that the error associated
with preparing the water solution in organic solvent is negligible and the measurement error is
0.02 when absorbance equals 1.
d. Determine the mass of water in sample R and percentage of moisture in sample S, using the
given procedure.
e. Is selective determination of methanol in ethanol feasible? Justify your answer using the
attached figures.
Procedure
Add denatured ethanol to the sample in ampoule S, mix it with a mixing rod and leave until the
precipitate falls to the ampoule bottom. Transfer the solution from above the residue to the 25-mL
volumetric flask. Add ca. 7 mL of ethanol to the ampoule with precipitate, mix it and, after the
precipitate has fallen, transfer the solution to the flask. Repeat the residue washing. Fill the volumetric
flask up to the graduation mark with denatured ethanol. Filter the solution from the volumetric flask
to the dry graduated test tube. Throw away the first filtrate portion. Collect 5 mL of filtrate, add 2 mL
of cobalt(II) chloride ethanol solution and add ethanol up to 10 mL. Measure the solution absorbance
at 625 nm (due to technical reasons)*. The measured solution absorbance Asolution should be compared
to the absorbance of solution that does not contain water (the Aanhydr will be given by the person
operating the spectrophotometer). Calculate the relative absorbance decrease:
𝐴anhydr − 𝐴sol
∆𝐴rel =
𝐴anhydr
Determine the percentage of water in the studied solution using the calibration curve.
Add 2 mL of cobalt(II) thiocyanate complex in aceton-ethanol solution to the test tube R and fill with
acetone-ethanol mixture up to 15 mL. Measure the absorbance at 625 nm. Calculate the relative
decrease of absorbance according to the formula given above. Determine the percentage of water in
the studied solution using the calibration curve.
* One obtains the highest measurement sensitivity when measuring absorbance at max. When a peak
is broad one does not lose much sensitivity when measuring close to the maximum. In case of the
experiments described here max is 620 and 655 nm, respectively. Due to technical reasons tuning the
light wavelength on the available spectrophotometers would take too much time and the
measurements are carried out at an intermediate wavelength of 625 nm.
Ad a. Malonyl dichloride hydrolyses in water yielding hydrochloric acid and maleic acid which is a
dicarboxylic acid. It follows from the potentiometric titration curve that the dissociation constants of
this acid Ka1 and Ka2 differ significantly. There are two abrupt changes in the titration curve, the first
one, poorly visible, at ca. 39 mL and the second 52 mL (the total titrant volume consumed to titrate
both acids). The difference between the first and second abrupt change is 13 mL which is 25% of the
total amount of titrant used. Summing up, there are two acids in the mixture – hydrochloric acid
(strong one) and maleic acid (weak one).
CH2(COCl)2 + 2H2O → CH2(COOH)2 + 2HCl
Ad b. I will use standard hydrochloric acid solution and phenolphthalein as an indicator to determine
the exact NaOH solution concentration. The hydrochloric acid concentration is 0.1057 mol/L. I will
carry out the titration until the first noticeable change of colour occurs. The colour will be compared
to a solution of HCl with the added indicator. The change of indicator colour should occur as close to
the equivalence point as possible which due to the possibility of NaOH solution contamination with
carbonates will be above pH=7. Methyl orange is a two-coloured indicator changing its colour in the
pH range 3.1 – 4.4 from red to yellow-orange. Addition of too much titrant do not cause a change in
colour and one is unable to say if an appropriate amount of titrant was added. The use of
phenolphthalein makes such observation possible (after addition of an excessive titrant amount the
solutions colour will be more intense). I repeat the titrations until I get similar results. I used on
average 28.20 mL of NaOH solution. I will calculate the NaOH concentration from the following
formula:
𝑐HCl ∙ 𝑉HCl 0.1057 ∙ 25.00
𝑐NaOH = = = 0.09371 mol ∙ L−1
𝑉0NaOH 28.20
Ad c. Using a volumetric pipette I transferred 25,00 mL of solution from flask P (1/8 of the total
sample) to an Erlenmeyer flask. I diluted it with water from a graduated cylinder and have approx. 70
mL of solution in the flask. I added a few drops of phenolphthalein and titrated the resulting solution
with NaOH solution until slight pink colour appeared. The volume of titrant used is denoted VNaOH. I
repeated the titration a few times until I got reproducible results. I calculated the average VNaOH which
equals to 32.70 mL. I calculated the number of hydronium ions millimoles in flask P according to the
following formula:
nH+ = 8∙cNaOH∙VNaOH = 8∙0.09371∙32.7 = 24.51 mmol
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Ad d. I sketch the conductometric titration curve:
Example data
Ad e. Basing on the results from point d. one may conclude that the sample of technical malonyl
dichloride contains hydrochloric acid as a contamination because 2·xNaOH > VNaOH. If 2·xNaOH = VNaOH
the sample would be pure malonyl dichloride and for 2·xNaOH < VNaOH the sample would be polluted
with maleic acid. The number of hydrochloric acid additive millimoles was equal to:
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nHCldom = 8∙cNaOH∙(2∙xNaOH - VNaOH) = 8∙0.09371∙(2∙16.99-32,70) = 0.96 mmol
If the maleic acid had been the additive, the number of such an additive millimoles would have been:
nmal dom = 4∙cNaOH∙( VNaOH – 2·xNaOH)
Ad f. In case of 2·xNaOH > VNaOH the number of maleic acid millimoles is equal to the number of
malonyl dichloride millimoles in the hydrolysed sample. The mass of technical malonyl dichloride
sample equals::
nClmal∙ MClmal+ nHCladd∙MHCl = 5.89∙140.92 + 0.96∙36.46 = 865.0 mg
The weight percentage of malonyl dichloride in the technical sample amounts to 95,95%.
If 2·xNaOH < VNaOH the number of malonyl dichloride moles is equal to the half of the hydrochloric
acid moles number in flask P.
Ampoule number 1 2 3
Ad a. The coloured mixtures presented in the attached figures exhibit varied sensitivity of colour
change with respect to the solvent composition. The system containing the CI 42051 dye is the least
sensitive to water content, the mixture containing thiocyanate cobalt(II) complex is more sensitive and
the ethanol solution of cobalt(II) chloride is the most sensitive. The last solution is also sensitive to
the methanol content but this solution changes colour to pink at room temperature and to blue after
heating (this is an example of thermochromism).
I take ca. 1 mL of every solution to dry test tubes and add a few drops of water to every test tube. The
first solution does not change colour despite the addition of ca. 1mL of water. The second one is
discoloured after addition of 1 drop of water, while the third one after addition of 5 drops of water.
The second solution is the only one to be discoloured after addition of ca. 1mL of methanol (it
becomes faintly pint) and after heating in hot water the blue colour comes back. One of the solutions
changes colour upon hydrochloric acid addition which confirms the identification of CI 42051 dye.
The observed phenomena allow one to conclude that there is CI 42041 dye solution in ampoule 1,
cobalt(II) chloride solution in ampoule 2 and thiocyanate cobalt(II) complex solution in ampoule 3.
Ad b. The calibration curve graphs for the measurements of absorbance at 625 nm for the thiocyanate
cobalt(II) complex in ethanol-acetone solution and cobalt(II) chloride in ethanol are shown in the
figure below.
29
For the cobalt(II) chloride in ethanol system the dependence of relative absorbance decrease as a
function of water content is not linear in the whole studied range, but it is linear for water content in
the range 0-1%. The slope of the line is 0.5464. For the thiocyanate cobalt(II) complex in ethanol-
acetone mixture system the calibration curve is linear in the range 0-15% with a slope of 0.061.
Ad c. The slope of the calibration curve determines the spectrophotometric method sensitivity. The increase
in water content by 1% causes a relative decrease of absorbance of 0.546 unit for the cobalt(II) chloride in
ethanol system and 0.061 unit for the thiocyanate cobalt(II) complex in ethanol-acetone system. The
quantification limit in the linear range of the curve is 0.05% water content for ethanol with cobalt(II)
chloride and a much higher value of 0.71% water content for the thiocyanate cobalt(II) complex in ethanol-
acetone mixture system.
Ad d. A sample of 2.23 g was mixed with a few portions of ethanol and the resulting solution was
collected in a 25-mL volumetric flask. The flask was filled with ethanol up to graduation mark and filtered
to a 10-ml test tube. 5 mL of filtrate were collected, ethanol solution of cobalt(II) chloride was added and
ethanol was added up to 10 mL. After mixing the solution absorbance was measured at 625 nm.
Absorbance of the anhydrous solution was 0.785 and that of the studied solution 0.572. The relative
decrease of absorbance was 0.271. I calculate the water concentration in the solution basing on the
calibration curve equation and obtain 0.48%. Therefore, there are 48 mg of water in 10 mL of solution.
There are 25/5 as much water in the whole sample which is 240 mg. The water content in the whole
sample is 0.240·100%/2.23 = 10.8%.
I will determine the water content in sample R by measuring the absorbance of a solution resulting from
the addition of 2 mL of cobalt(II) thiocyanate solution and complementing the solution with acetone-
ethanol mixture up to 15 mL. The absorbance of anhydrous solution was 1.035, while that of the studied
solution 0.572. The relative absorbance decrease was 0.355. The water content calculated from the
calibration curve is 6.2% and the water mass in sample R is 0.062·15 = 0.93 g.
30
Ad e. The decrease in cobalt(II) chloride ethanol solution absorbance caused by the presence of
methanol could serve as a basis for the methanol content determination in ethanol. However, the result
would be strongly affected by water. Heating of the solution could be a way to check whether that
absorbance decrease was caused by water. In case of methanol the blue colour returns which does not
take place in the presence of water.
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