Preview

Extraction

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
507 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Extraction
Distillation
Introduction: The recrystallization technique you learned last lab is a method for purifying solids. This week we will learn how to perform a distillation, a method for purifying liquids. Distillation is a common wet-chemical technique for separating organic compounds based on differences in boiling points. Upon heating a mixture of organic compounds, the more volatile compounds (those with the lowest boiling point) will vaporize first (i.e. be converted to gases), leaving the higher-boiling compounds behind in the mixture. By isolating the vapor produced at different temperatures and condensing them (i.e., converting gases to liquids), you can effectively separate and purify compounds based on their boiling points. While there are multiple factors that contribute to the efficiency of distillation, the first, most obvious is the boiling points of the compounds themselves. If one compound is significantly more volatile than another (∆bp > 40 C), then the compounds can be effectively separated in one vaporization step, in a process called simple distillation. However, if the boiling points of the compounds are too similar, then the vapor produced at any given temperature will be a mixture of the two compounds. This time, a process called fractional distillation can be used. Fractional distillation uses a column that allows many small distillations to occur as the vapor ascends the fractional distillation column.
Purpose: In this experiment we aim to demonstrate that we can separate two volatile compounds from a mixture due to the different chemical properties of each compound. We will accomplish this by a separation procedure known as distillation, which relies on each compound having a distinct and separate boiling point. Our pure products will be analyzed with gas chromatography to determine the success of the distillation.
Glasswares:
- Heat source
- Distillation flask
- Still gead
- Termometer
- Condenser
- Water hose
- Receiver adapter

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Organic Lab 2583-4

    • 503 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The purpose of this lab is to purify solids contaminated by relatively small amount of impurities by a technique called Recrystallization. Compounds that have different solubility at different temperature usually can be recrystallized.…

    • 503 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Orgo Lab 5

    • 539 Words
    • 3 Pages

    This experiment was carried out as described in Class Pak. The heat source power was set to 3 for fractional distillation and to 2 for simple distillation. For both processes, aluminum foil was wrapped around the heat source and flask to trap the heat and speed up the process.…

    • 539 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Distillation Lab Report

    • 418 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Conclusion: During this lab I learn how to do simple and fractional distillation. Although the group I worked with only did simple distillation, I carefully observed how the group that did the fractional distillation. We collected all the results, to have a more precise range on what the results were. One way to produce an error in this process would have been if our procedures were done wrong or reversed or if we placed the compounds in a improper…

    • 418 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The distillation procedure is initiated by gradually heating the mixture until it reaches the temperature of the liquid with the lower boiling point. This liquid then turns into a vapor and leaves to mixture and is collected by the set up apparatus. In fractional distillation a vigreux column is used. This provides for surface area for condensation to occur. At each condensation event the vapor is enriched in the low boiling point component and the liquid is enriched in the high boiling point component. The surfaces where condensation occurs are called theoretical plates. Separation is more efficient when there are more theoretical plates. Therefore, fractional distillation is more efficient in separating than simple distillation. Another new technique was gas chromatography. Gas chromatography is used to separate volatile components of a mixture. First, a small amount is draw up into a syringe and the contents of the syringe are placed into a hot injector pot of the gas chromatograph. The components of the mixture evaporate into the gas phase inside the injector. A carrier gas flows through the injected and pushed the…

    • 395 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Introduction: Simple distillation is a commonly used method to separate and purify the mixtures of organic liquids into their original components. Mixtures of two miscible liquids with two different boiling points were separated. Therefore, it can be said that the two organic compounds are separated by exploiting the different boiling temperatures of the liquids. Both vaporization and condensation were used in this experiment. The two organic compounds used in this experiment were ethyl benzene and cyclohexane, which have the boiling point of 136°C and 80.74°C, respectively. This experiment resulted…

    • 1803 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    O Chem

    • 729 Words
    • 3 Pages

    40ml of an equimolar mixture of cyclohexane and toluene was obtained and transferred into a 100ml round bottomed boiling flask which contained boiling chips. The distilling column was packed with metal sponge and the height was measured in centimeters and recorded. The distillation apparatus was assembled and a heat mantle was set. Several vials were used as fraction receivers. The vials were labeled, 1-4, and weighed prior to adding the liquid mixture and after the liquid was added. The temperature was recorded before adding heat in order to begin distillation (20º C). The temperature was recorded prior to each distillation fraction and after each 2ml of distillate which was recorded in table 1. The system was turned off and cooled down letting the remaining condensed vapor drain into the round bottomed flask. This sample was transferred by pipette into a vial…

    • 729 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Orgo Lab 2

    • 496 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Experiment II involved two kinds of distillation techniques: simple and fractional. Simple distillation was done to separate ethyl acetate—which has a usual boiling point of 77º—from a less volatile component, while fractional distillation was done to distinguish an ethyl acetate/n-butyl acetate mixture, which has boiling points of 77º and 125 º, respectively.…

    • 496 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Chem Lab

    • 858 Words
    • 4 Pages

    There are millions of different organic compounds. Most of them are found in mixtures and in order to achieve a pure form they need to be separated, isolated, and purified. However, there are endless numbers of possible mixtures, which make it impossible to have a pre-designed procedure for every mixture. So chemists often have to make their own procedures. The purpose of this experiment was to prepare the student to the real world by them designing their own procedure which will help them understand the techniques of separation and purification better. The goal was to extract two of the components of the mixture that consisted of 50% benzoic acid, 40% benzoin, and 10% dibromobenzene. The benzoic acid was extracted by the use of base and extraction technique. Then a crystallization was performed in order to separate benzoin by the use of hexane a solvent, leaving the dibromobenzne in the mother liquor. The percent recovery for benzoic acid was 91.8% and 80.3% for the benzoin. The MP for benzoic acid was 119-122°C (1) and 135-136°C (2)for the benzoin. The high percent recovery and closeness of measured MP to the literature value indicate that the designed procedure was successful.…

    • 858 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Background: Distillation consists of heating a liquid until it vaporizes, and then condensing the vapor and collecting it in a separate container. Distillation is used to separate mixtures of liquids that either have different boiling points, or that have one component that does not distill. There are many types of distillation, each of which has a distinct purpose. Steam distillation is used to isolate volatile substances that have high boiling points. When two immiscible liquids are distilled together, the amounts of each component in the distillate are constant. Also, the boiling point of the mixture is lower than that of either of the individual components. This is because the components do not have compatible intermolecular forces, and so the component in lesser concentration will form “bubbles”, like oil droplets in water, weakening the overall intermolecular forces in the mixture, and thus lowering the boiling point. This process allows high- boiling compounds, which can decompose before they boil if heated alone, to be distilled at temperatures below 100°C. Once the liquid mixture is heated to its boiling point, the liquid is converted to vapor. The vapors, richer in a more volatile component, are then condensed into a separate container.…

    • 635 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Based on the theoretical and actual refractive index of both simple and fractional distillation we can determine the success of the experiment. The results are also supported by general conditions of distillation. The actual refractive index for the simple distillation was very similar to the theoretical index we calculated.(Simple- 1.3903 at 22.1 degrees versus Fractional 1.3707 at 22.9) The theoretical refractive index was 1.397 at 20.5 degrees. If depicted in graph form, the lines would match up more closely than the refractive qualities in the fractional distillation. Simple distillations are best separated with two compounds whose boiling points have a difference greater than 30 degrees celsius. The difference between cyclohexane and 2-methylpentane is 52.74 degrees.(cyclohexane-80.74-2 methypentane-28).…

    • 274 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fractional distillation is the separation of a mixture into its fractional parts that entails many concurrent vaporization-condensation cycles. This works because of different boiling points of individual substances. The temperature of the fractional distillation column decreases as its length increases. A higher boiling point component condenses on the column and returns to the solution whereas the lower boiling point component passes through the column and is collected in a receiver and its purity increases.…

    • 610 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Seperation of Mixtures

    • 1109 Words
    • 5 Pages

    This is the process of heating a mixture in order to drive off a volatile liquid and make the remaining component dry. The mixture that will be separated in this lab contains three components: naphthalene, C10H8, common table salt, NaCl, and sand, SiO2. The separation will be done according to the scheme shown on the next page and involves three basic steps: 1. Heating the mixture to sublime the naphthalene. 2.…

    • 1109 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    chem paper

    • 259 Words
    • 1 Page

    The purpose of this experiment was to find the boiling point of an unknown solution in order to find its identity from the chart of substances. Also the unknown substance was compared to distilled water on viscosity and on surface tension. The unknown solution letter was D and 25 ml were obtained in a 50 ml graduated cylinder. We also obtained 25 ml of distilled water in a 50 ml graduated cylinder. The unknown solution’s viscosity and surface tension were compared to those of the distilled water, and the unknown solution scored lower in both categories compared to distilled water. The initial temperature of the unknown solution was 22.2 degrees Celsius. The boiling point of the unknown solution in the first trial was 82.3 C; second trial was 80.3 C and third was 84 C. These boiling points could not be exact measurements because the measurements were not completely accurate to one another, and the solution is not 100% pure. Isopropyl alcohol is the unknown according to the results. The percentage yield of the experiment was 102.34% and the percent error was .06. Boiling point is the temperature in which the vapor pressure of a liquid becomes equal to atmospheric pressure; this is the reaction that Isopropyl alcohol had in this experiment. The most volatile solution is pentane because it has a higher vapor pressure of 525.0 mmHg and the lowest volatile solution is Isopropyl alcohol because it has the lowest vapor pressure. Acetone has the lowest boiling point. Isopropyl alcohol started splashing before the water started boiling and this is the reason to conclude Isopropyl was the unknown…

    • 259 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Introduction: In this experiment, a mixture of two compounds, cyclohexane and toluene, was separated into fractions by the techniques of simple and fractional distillation. The individual fractions that were gathered from the distillation were analyzed using gas chromatography (GC) and used to compare the efficiencies of the two different distillation techniques. The ultimate goal of this experiment was to determine whether simple or fractional distillation was the more efficient means of separating volatile compounds.…

    • 1196 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Liquid-liquid extraction is a technique used to separate chemical substances in order to purify or identify the various components of a mixture. Flavors, spices, perfumes, and medicines are just some of the everyday things that are extracted from plants and other natural sources [1]. The basic principle used to carry out this separation is the mixing of two liquids that are immiscible with each other. This creates layers of liquid, which can be separated and then isolated to help to identify compounds. Another important concept to remember in this experiment is that ionic salts are polar and therefore water soluble, and neutral molecules are non-polar and will usually not dissolve in water.…

    • 1570 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics