Testing for Sulfate Ions in Tap Water

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To determine the presence of sulfate ions in tap water, several methods can be employed. A common approach involves adding barium chloride (BaCl2) to a water sample. If sulfate ions are present, a white precipitate of barium sulfate (BaSO4) will form, indicating their presence. This method is preferred due to BaCl2's higher solubility compared to barium nitrate. Alternatively, lead(II) nitrate or silver nitrate can be used, but they are less reliable because their sulfate salts are more soluble than barium sulfate. Infrared spectroscopy can also be utilized to detect sulfate ions, as they exhibit characteristic S=O vibrations around 1000 cm-1. While barium sulfate can be dissolved in hot concentrated sulfuric acid, this method is hazardous and generally not recommended for simple testing.
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I have no idea where to begin for this one:

How do you dtermine if sulfate ions are present in tap water?

Thanks!
 
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Barium sulfate has a very low solubility in water, so concentrated sample of tap water may be tested with an excess of barium ions, say, barium nitrate. An additional test which can be done after precipitation occurs is that barium sulfate can be dissolved in hot concentrated sulfuric acid, but this is very dangerous. Precipitation might be enough for simple cases.

Sulfate ion is IR-active, so an infrared of the sample without considering water peaks might also be helpful; a peak system belonging to S=O vibration occurs at around 1000 cm-1.

These will help you.
 
(CH_{3}COO)_{2}SO_{4}is also insoluble.So if on addn of a little lead acetate,a white ppt is formed,it indicates presence of sulfate(sulphate in my place) ions .
 
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A cheecky answer will be by spectroscopy.:biggrin:
 
Poolwin2001, are you sure the structure you wrote your first post is not PbSO4? Barium sulfate is less soluble than lead sulfate, but the latter is also okay by the way.
 
Oops.I guess you are right .It should be PbSO4.
Sorry for the error erin.
Thanks for correcting it.
 
SO4 ion detection

The simplest and probably cheapest way to determine the presence of sulphate ion in the water is by using Barium Chloride soln. ( BaCl2 is preferrable than Barium Nitrate because it's more water soluble). Dissolve about 5 to 10 gram of BaCl2.2H2O in 100 ml distilled water. To test the water, just add several drops of BaCl2 soln. If there's white precipitate and cloudy appearance then big chance that your water contains sulphate ion.
Other alternative is by using Lead (II) Nitrate or Silver Nitrate, but these two as not as reliable as BaCl2 because the solubility of the sulphate of lead and silver is greater than BaSO4.
 

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