Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.
Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.
Title: Formation Constant Lab Report
Description: Determine the constant of formation for an iron compound
Description: Determine the constant of formation for an iron compound
Document Preview
Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above
Katarina Ong
Connor Wilson
Michael Oliver
February 4 & 11, 2014
Investigation 37: What is the Formation Constant
Experiment Background
Fe3+(aq)+ NCS-(aq) ↔ FeNCS2+(aq)
A theater company has recently discovered this reaction and wants to use it to
prepare solutions that look like blood
...
This will help the
company understand the conditions under which to control the reaction
...
This was accomplished by preparing various
solutions of Fe3+ and NCS-, allowing the solutions to reach equilibrium, then
determining the concentrations of the reactants
...
With this relationship
established, the concentration of FeNCS2+ in the solutions of Fe3+ and NCSallowed to equilibrate could be determined
...
With the equilibrium concentrations of all
three reactants determined, it was now possible to calculate the equilibrium
constant, following the formula
1
Materials and Equipment
Materials
Equipment
Prepared FeNCS2+ Solutions
3 - 50mL Pipette
2
...
00 × 10-5M FeNCS2+
Lint-free tissue paper
6
...
00 × 10-5M FeNCS2+
6 15mL Test Tubes
1
...
20 × 10-4M FeNCS2+
1
...
00 × 10-3M Fe3+
2
...
00 × 10-1M HNO3
Deionized Water
Method
The first step in determining the formation constant for the reaction
Fe3+(aq)+ NCS-(aq) ↔ FeNCS2+(aq)
was to establish a relationship between concentration and absorbance for
solutions of FeSCN2+
...
First, a 3mL cuvette was filled with 1
...
This wavelength was determined to be 470nm, as can be seen in
Table 1
...
The absorbance values
noted in Table 2 were collected in this manner
...
It is this value that allows concentration data to
be determined from absorbance data, following the Beer-Lambert law
A = ε bC
Where A is absorbance, ε is the proportionality constant, b is the length of the
light path in the colorimeter, and C is the concentration of the solution being
tested
...
The quantities noted in Table 2 were added to 6 15mL test tubes, one for each
solution, and the reaction was allowed to come to equilibrium for several minutes
...
With this
data, in conjunction with the Beer-Lambert curve, the equilibrium concentration of
FeSCN2+ for each solution could be determined, and the concentrations of Fe3+
and SCN- could also be determined using stoichiometric ratios
...
3
Data Collection
Table 1
...
297
470*
...
051
635
...
[FeSCN
2+
]aq (M)
2+
were transferred into cuvettes, the
Absorbance
blank
0
...
00 × 10−5
0
...
00 × 10−5
0
...
00 × 10−5
0
...
00 × 10−5
0
...
00 × 10−4
0
...
20 × 10−4
0
...
40 × 10−4
0
...
4
Figure 1
...
The slope of the line is the ε value, which will be used in the
Beer-Lambert Law ( A = εbC ) to convert Absorbance to concentration
...
These solutions were placed in a 3mL
cuvette and read in a colorimeter for absorbance
...
00200)(5
...
0)
[Fe
3+
] =
...
00200)(1
...
0)
[KSCN] = 2
...
This table details the concentrations of Fe3+ and SCN- our group prepared, and
the absorbance value collected after the solutions were allowed to reach equilibrium, as
well as the calculated concentrations of FeSCN2+
...
00200
M Fe 3+
mL
...
1
M HNO
1
5
...
0
4
...
001
2
...
173
6
...
0
1
...
5
...
00 × 10−4 0
...
95 × 10−5
3
5
...
0
3
...
001
4
...
311
1
...
0
2
...
5
...
00 × 10−4 0
...
41 × 10−4
5
5
...
0
2
...
001
6
...
437
1
...
0
3
...
5
...
00 × 10−4 0
...
97 × 10−4
[Fe
]
3
Data Processing
The absorbance data from the 6 solutions were converted into concentration data using
the ε value found in Figure 1, and using the Beer-Lambert Law
...
ex
...
173 = 2630(1)(C)
C=
0
...
58 × 10−5 M
The Absorbances and Concentration are shown in Table 4
...
Absorbance values and FeSCN2+ concentration for the six prepared solutions
of Fe3+ and SCN- allowed to equilibrate
...
173
6
...
209
7
...
311
1
...
371
1
...
437
1
...
517
1
...
ex
...
001
-x
...
0002
-x
...
ex
...
001−x)(
...
58×10−5 )
(
...
58×10−5 ))(
...
58×10−5 ))
K f = 525
7
Table 3
...
Solution
Formation Constant (K)
1
525
2
391
3
476
4
458
5
459
6
486
Figure 2
...
The error bars were
added to show the variation in Kf values (as solution 2 had a lower Kf value than all the
other solutions)
...
8
Conclusion and Evaluation
The problem presented in this Laboratory Investigation was to determine the constant of
formation (Kf) for the following reaction:
Fe3+(aq)+ NCS-(aq) ↔ FeNCS2+(aq)
The process by which this constant was determined began with the establishment of a
Beer-Lambert curve, allowing concentration and absorbance to be related for solutions
of FeNCS2+
...
Armed with the
information regarding the concentration of FeNCS2+ in our six prepared solutions, as
well as the initial concentrations of Fe3+ and SCN-, detailed in Table 3, it was possible to
determine the equilibrium concentrations of FeNCS2+, Fe3+, and NCS-, and from this the
constant of formation for this reaction, following the expression
The final Kf value, determined by averaging the Kf values across the six trials
performed, was 466
...
It may also be suggested that the final
concentration of FeNCS2+ is dependant on the initial concentration SCN- and can be
controlled by the amount of SCN added, since concentration of Fe3+ was kept constant
in this case
...
Though the
formation constant should remain constant across various initial concentrations of
reactants, a higher initial concentration of Fe3+ and SCN- will invariably produce a
redder, more blood-like substance
...
The establishment of the Beer-Lambert curve in the first part of the
investigation was based on pre-prepared solutions, so any error introduced at this point
would be unavoidable without producing more accurate dilutions
...
Inaccuracies in buretting the the various solutions into the
test tubes may have led to high or low values for the initial concentrations, compounding
the error as these values were used to calculate the value of Kf
...
10
Title: Formation Constant Lab Report
Description: Determine the constant of formation for an iron compound
Description: Determine the constant of formation for an iron compound