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Download AP Lab - MW of Volatile Liquid - North Allegheny School District
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Name __________________________________________________ Date ________________________ NORTH ALLEGHENY SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL AP Chemistry MOLAR MASS OF A VOLATILE LIQUID INTRODUCTION: If a substance behaves as an ideal gas, we can easily calculate its molar mass if we measure the mass m of a volume V of the pure gas at known temperature T and pressure P. The ideal gas law is PV = nRT, where n = moles of gas. But n = m/Mw where Mw equals molar mass. Therefore, Mw = mRT/PV. This method is applicable to any substance, provided the chemist has sufficient skill and sophisticated gas-handling equipment to obtain the sample under controlled conditions. However, if the sample is a liquid at room temperature, with only a modest vapor pressure, and if it can be completely vaporized at some readily controlled high temperature (such as that of boiling water), the technique can be simplified; it is known as the Dumas method, especially among organic chemists. This experiment is not different from the Dumas method, except that the equipment is extremely simple and inexpensive. An arbitrary amount of sample is put into the vessel of known volume (an Erlenmeyer flask) and vaporized at approximately 100oC, the excess escaping through a pinhole opening in the flask cover. The mass of the vapor is obtained after the flask has been cooled and the vapor has condensed. We assume that the pressure of the vapor in the hot flask is the same as that in the laboratory as shown in the barometer. There is a basic flaw in the method. We obtain the weight of vapor by subtracting the mass of the empty vessel from the final mass, on the assumption that the air content of the flask is the same during each weighing, which would be true only if the sample's vapor pressure were negligible at room temperature. In a typical case, neglect of this error gives results about 5% low. Usually a Dumas molar mass was used to determine a molecular formula from an empirical formula and so this small error would not affect the decision. Each student will determine the molar mass of an unknown liquid assigned by the instructor. At least two complete determinations should be run. If the agreement is poor (worse than 5%), try a third, if time allows. If you are required to make a correction for vapor pressure, your instructor will provide the value of the room temperature vapor pressure of the liquid. When the lab is complete the value of the molar mass of the volatile liquid should be known. PROCEDURE: 1. Construct a hot water bath similar to the setup on the next page. Allow the bath to heat as you move on to the rest of the lab. 2. Clean and flame dry a 125 mL Erlenmeyer flask. Allow to cool. 3. Cut a square of aluminum large enough to cover the mouth of the flask. Don't make the aluminum square too large. Just enough to cover the mouth. 4. Measure the mass of the flask and the aluminum cover on the milligram balance. 5. Put one full pipet worth of your unknown liquid into the flask (use the pipets provided). 6. Press the aluminum cover over the mouth of the flask, and punch a pinhole in the cover using a tack. 7. Mount the flask in a beaker of water so that only the top of the neck protrudes (see figure 1). Figure 1: Simplified apparatus for the Dumas method 8. Heat the flask until you feel all of the liquid has evaporated. At that point continue to heat for another minute at a gentle boil so that the vapor completely fills the flask. (the water in the beaker must be gently boiling for at least 2-3 minutes before removing) 9. Remove the flask from the water bath and without any delay immerse the flask in a beaker of cold water. 10. Carefully wipe the water from the outside of the flask. Delicately try to lift the aluminum from the sides of the flask without removing the aluminum to dry any water that is under the aluminum. Water tends to collect in the folds of the foil around the neck of the flask. Be very diligent about making sure the flask and aluminum is dry. Once the flask and aluminum is dry, obtain a final mass (this should all be done quickly). 11. Measure the volume of the flask. You can be creative in this step. 12. Repeat steps 1-10 using a clean, dry flask and a new piece of foil. 13. Obtain the barometric pressure (your instructor will provide this). CALCULATIONS: 1. Using the data collected from above and your knowledge of the ideal gas equation determine the molecular weight of the unknown liquid. Ignore the vapor pressure of the unknown liquid in this step. 2. The unknown you are using has a vapor pressure of 75 mm Hg at 20oC. Think about the following discussion concerning the experiment: The total pressure in the experiment is the same for both the initial and final weighing, but in the final weighing, the air content is 75 mm Hg less than the initial. Calculate the mass of the excluded air from n = PV/RT and using 29.0 g for the molecular mass of air. If the unknown were completely nonvolatile and no air was excluded, the final weighing would have included the mass of the air calculated above. Adding the excluded air correction to your mass of volatile liquid collected in the data table, recalculate the molar mass for the volatile liquid. QUESTIONS: 1. Determine the average of your two MW determinations (after correction). If it is known that the MW of your unknown is 88.1 g/mol, determine your percent error. 2. Was the vapor you investigated really "ideal" in the experiment (was it at a temperature that put it far above its boiling point)? Explain the difference between an ideal and non-ideal gas. 3. When placed in the ice bath, did all of the vapor within the flask condense into a liquid? Explain your answer with respect to the concept of vapor pressure. 4. Why is it not necessary to be precise when the liquid is measured out into the flask? 5. Hypothetically, imagine the following mistakes were made when carrying out the experiment. What effect does each have on the calculated molecular mass? Be specific. For example, too large because. . . a. Only part of the flask was immersed in the boiling water bath (think about the neck of the flask sticking out), so the temperature in part of the flask was less than that of the water bath. b. Three pipets of the liquid were initially placed in the Erlenmeyer flask instead of the recommended 2 pipets. c. The mass of the condensed liquid was not determined quickly. Instead, the flask was allowed to stand for a while before its mass was measured. 6. Suggest how you could perform the experiment on an unknown liquid that boiled at 120 oC, keeping the setup of the experiment essentially intact. CONCLUSION: Summarize via a paragraph.