Identifying Unidentified Yellow Chemical in Tin Chloride

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers around the unexpected formation of an insoluble yellow substance when preparing solutions of tin(II) chloride dihydrate (SnCl2.2H2O). The user speculates that the yellow precipitate could be due to impurities in the tin chloride, despite the product being labeled as at least 97% pure. The quantity of the yellow substance suggests it may not be a mere impurity. Reference to the Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) indicates that tin(II) chloride can form an insoluble basic salt when dissolved in excess water, which may explain the precipitation. A chemistry teacher suggested that the tin chloride might have hydrolyzed due to age, resulting in insoluble tin hydroxide. The user attempted to mitigate this by using higher quality SnCl2 and adding hydrochloric acid to acidify the solution, yet the precipitate still formed. Further observations are planned to determine if the new solutions yield different results.
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Today I was making up some solutions of tin(II) chloride dihydrate (SnCl2.2H2O) and I noticed that an insoluble, yellow chemical had formed at the bottom of the beaker. I have no idea what this could be.

I've thought about the possibility that there was an impurity in the tin chloride, but the label on the jar of tin chloride I was using said that the chemical was at least 97% pure (the stuff in the jar was coloured white, so there couldn't have been much of an impurity if there was one). Also, there seemed to be too much of this yellow stuff for it to just be an impurity.

So, does anyone have any ideas as to what this yellow chemical is and what may have led to its formation?
 
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I spoke to my chemistry teacher today and he reckoned that the SnCl2 was just old and had hydrolysed in the bottle (forming insoluble tin hydroxide). I re-made the solutions using some better quality SnCl2, so I'll check the solutions again tomorrow to see if anything has precipitated out.
 
Oh, I also added some HCl to acidify the solution and help prevent the tin reacting and forming a precipitate.
 
Hmm...even with the acid the solution still ended up forming a precipitate. I just don't know what's happening...
 
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