Investigating K3Fe(C2O4)3.3H2O Synthesis

  • Thread starter Thread starter z89
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Synthesis
AI Thread Summary
The synthesis of K3Fe(C2O4)3.3H2O involves reacting Iron(II) ammonium sulfate with oxalic acid to form Iron(II) oxalate, followed by oxidation to potassium trioxalatoferrate(III) using H2O2 and K2C2O4. The discussion raises concerns about gas evolution during the oxidation step, questioning whether the gas is CO2 from oxalate oxidation rather than oxygen. The participant notes that the equation does not mention the oxidation of oxalate or the release of gas, which they find curious. Additionally, they inquire about the favorability of the reaction between oxalate and H2O2. Overall, the conversation highlights the complexities and nuances of the chemical reactions involved in this synthesis.
z89
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Actually this is a part of homework. I've found the answer, but I have some problems.

The lab I did in previous lesson is the preparation of K3Fe(C2O4)3.3H2O from Fe(NH4)2(SO4)2.6H2O

In the first step, Iron(II) ammonium sulphate was reacted with oxalic acid dihydrate to form Iron(II) oxalate precipitate.

In the second step, Iron(II) oxalate was oxidized to potassium trioxalatoferrate(III) K3Fe(C2O4)3 by addition of H2O2 and K2C2O4.

In fact, I found link(s) talking about the lab

http://www.chem.umass.edu/genchem/chem112/112_Experiment_1.htm

but I was a bit doubt about the equation mentioned. I observed that there was bubbles formed/gas evolving in step 2. I believed that this is not oxygen, since Fe2+ is oxidized to Fe3+ in this process, H2O2(O: -1 in ON) cannot be oxidized to O2(O: 0) in the same time.
Therefore, it should be CO2, which was oxidized from oxalate, am I right?

And then, why the equation did not mention the oxidization of oxalate... even the release of gas

of course, this problem didn't affect the calculation process. I am just curious ..
Thanks.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I've known iron salts to catalytically decompose hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. Was the peroxide present in excess?
 
yes, thanks for your reminder:biggrin:

but, is the reaction between oxalate and H2O2 favourable?
 
I don't get how to argue it. i can prove: evolution is the ability to adapt, whether it's progression or regression from some point of view, so if evolution is not constant then animal generations couldn`t stay alive for a big amount of time because when climate is changing this generations die. but they dont. so evolution is constant. but its not an argument, right? how to fing arguments when i only prove it.. analytically, i guess it called that (this is indirectly related to biology, im...
Back
Top