Chemical Reactions and Observations: Barium Chloride and Sodium Sulfate

  • Thread starter Thread starter Joules23
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Chemistry
AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the chemical reactions involving barium chloride and sodium sulfate, focusing on precipitate formation when hydrochloric acid is added to various solutions. Participants are trying to determine which compounds are present or absent based on solubility rules and the resulting reactions. It is emphasized that insoluble compounds lead to precipitates, with specific attention to silver chloride (AgCl) and barium sulfate (BaSO4) as key examples. Users express confusion about interpreting solubility charts and identifying the correct compounds present after reactions. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding solubility principles to predict chemical behavior without conducting experiments.
Joules23
Messages
33
Reaction score
0
1) A solution contains one or more of the following:
Silver nitrate
Potassium sulfate
iron(III) nitrate
Barium bromide

You add one drop of hydrochloric acid (solution). There is a precipitate.

Next you add one drop of barium nitrate (solution). There is no observable reaction.

Present: ______
Absent: ______
Your next step: ______

--------------------------------
2) A solution contains none or some of the following:
Silver nitrate
Copper(II) sulfate
iron(III) chloride
barium nitrate

You ad one drop of barium chloride (solution). There is no observable change.
Next you add one drop of sodium sulfate (solution). There is no observable change.

Present: ______
Absent: ______
Next step: _______

--------------------

Anyone have any idea as to how i would find this out, without actually performing the experiment?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Last edited by a moderator:
also remember this:

if A Compound in water...

is soluble = no precipitant
insoluble = precipitant

use the solubility chart/table to determine what is soluble/insoluble. Shouldnt be that difficult...
 
i still don't understand i looked on the chart for #1 and they all are Soluble... how would adding the HCl factor in with the chart

HNO3 (3 is subscript)
HSO4 (4 is subscript)
3NO3H (2nd 3 is subscript)
HBr2 (2 is subscript)

Those are what i got after adding the HCl to the silver nitrate, potassium sulfate, etc... Now where do i go from there?
 
Last edited:
ok please let me know if i got this right

for #1, the only one present is silver nitrate

for #2 the only ones present are Copper(II) sulfate and iron(III)chloride

Also what is meant by, "your next step?"
 
AgCl, AgBr and BaSO4 are insoluble; every other combination is soluble...
 
im still not understanding it... ok, insoluble = precipitate .. so are you saying for both #1 and #2, the ones present are AgCl, AgBr and BaSO4 ?

btw, yes i am stupid
 
Last edited:
Joules23 said:
im still not understanding it... ok, insoluble = precipitate .. so are you saying for both #1 and #2, the ones present are AgCl, AgBr and BaSO4 ?
#1. If you add HCl and there is a precipitate (=insoluble) and the only insoluble substance among those could be AgCl, what do you conclude? If you add Ba++ and there is no precipitate, knowing that the only insoluble substance could be BaSO4, what do you conclude? Ecc.
 
When you use the solubility chart the higher always prevails, is that where your getting caught?
 
Back
Top