My chem class just finished a lab in which the objective was to find the percentage of silver and barium in a nitrate salt mixture by precipitating the chromates, separating out the precipitate from the solvent and spectator ions via filtration, and analysis of the combined precipitate.
In the lab the salt was dissolved and the barium and silver ions were precipitated with excess potassium chromate solution. the precipitate was collected.
i am supposed to find the percentage of silver and barium in the original sample; however i am having a VERY difficult time calculating this.
my teacher suggested either using a system of equations (two unknown variables) or finding the moles and then working from there. but i am really lost.
here is the data:
30mL of K2CrO4 @ .25 M
mass of flask: 95.383g
mass of flask & sample: 96.336g
after the precipate was collected and dried it weighed 0.944 g
any help setting up the calculation is much appreciated. if i didn't explain it well enough i woudl be happy to elaborate. i'm just really struggling right now.
For Further Reading
CHEMISTRY - DrBob222, Monday, January 28, 2008 at 8:03pm
Let X = mass Ag
Let Y = mass Ba
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One equation you can use is:
X(molar mass Ag2CrO4/2*atomic mass Ag) + Y(molar mass BaCrO4/atomic mass Ba) = 0.944
Do you have the mass of the sample of nitrates you used? I hope so. Then the second equation would be as follows:
X(molar mass AgNO3/atomic mass Ag) + Y(molar mass Ba(NO3)2/atomic mass Ba) = mass sample taken.
When you find X and Y, then
% follows from that. Let me know if you still have problems.
6 answers
this is what i have thus far:
X(331.74g/2*107.87g) + Y(253.33g/137.33g)=0.944g
which is:
X(1.54g)+Y(1.84g)= 0.944
is that correct? how would i solve for the nitrates? we didn't measure each one separately--we measured the original sample. the original sample with nitrates measured .953 g
It is
X*(molar mass AgNO3/atomic mass Ag) + Y*(molar mass Ba(NO3)2/atomic mass Ba) = 0.953.
Solve the two equations simultaneously. I see you have rounded the 1.54 and 1.84 to the correct number of significant figures. From a personal standpoint, especially with problems like this where the DIFFERENCES in the calculation may be small, I like to carry the extra places and round at the end. With small differences it is quite easy to make rounding errors. After you find X and Y (these are the grams Ag and grams Ba, then percent is the %Ag = (mass Ag/mass sample)*100 and %Ba = (mass Ba/mass sample)*100.
Let me know if you don't understand.
here is what i have.
X(1.53768425g)+Y(1.844680696g)=0.944g
X(1.574765922g)+Y(1.902934537g)=0.953g
to solve this i know i need to use a system of equations, but i'm having trouble setting the coefficients to equal each other.
1.5377X + 1.8447Y = 0.944
X = (0.944-1.8447Y)/1.5377
Now substitute this value of X into equation 2 and solve. That will get a Y value which can be substituted into equation 1 to obtain X.