Question
In lab the other day we did an acid/base extraction to separate mixtures. The top layer of the mixture is the organic layer, which consists of diethyl ether and fluorine. The bottom layer is considered to be the aqueous layer, which consists of water and benzoate anion.
The different compounds have different polarities, my questions is: what is the reason we can separate compounds of different solubility, is because the solutions are insoluble in each other?
And then when choosing specific solvents for an extraction, what is the reason for choosing them? Is it again because of the fact that different molecules have different densities and mix or don't mix well with other solvents?
Thanks for the help!
The different compounds have different polarities, my questions is: what is the reason we can separate compounds of different solubility, is because the solutions are insoluble in each other?
And then when choosing specific solvents for an extraction, what is the reason for choosing them? Is it again because of the fact that different molecules have different densities and mix or don't mix well with other solvents?
Thanks for the help!
Answers
Related Questions
Does this sound okay, if not how might i improve it?
Thanks.
In this lab the purpose states...
We've been working on extraction of known/unknown compound mixtures lately, and we have to give equa...
I do not understand acid base extraction. why should we mix, for example, an organic and aqueous co...
Could you use NaOH to separate acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) and acetaminophen (Tylenol) by acid-ba...