1 / 9

Lecture 3

Lecture 3. Chapter 5: Extraction Lecture Problem 1 Due Thursday This week in lab: Ch 4: Recrystallization & Melting Point Procedures 1 & 2 Ch 4 PreLab Due Quiz 1 Next week in lab: Ch 4: Procedures 3 & 5 Ch 5: Extraction, Procedure 1 Ch 5 PreLab Due & Quiz 2. Chapter 5: Extraction.

Télécharger la présentation

Lecture 3

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 3 Chapter 5: Extraction Lecture Problem 1 Due Thursday This week in lab: Ch 4: Recrystallization & Melting Point Procedures 1 & 2 Ch 4 PreLab Due Quiz 1 Next week in lab: • Ch 4: Procedures 3 & 5 • Ch 5: Extraction, Procedure 1 • Ch 5 PreLab Due & Quiz 2

  2. Chapter 5: Extraction Extraction • “Pulling out” a component from a mixture • Used to isolated specific compounds • Used to purify a compound • Types: Liquid/liquid extraction, solid/liquid extraction Two day lab: Procedure 1: Separation of an unknown three-component mixture Procedure 2: Extraction of caffeine from tea or coffee

  3. Chapter 5: Procedure 1 Possible Unknowns: Separation of an unknown three-component mixture: • Acidic component (CO2H) • Basic component (NH2) • Neutral component Acids: Separate by acid/base chemistry Bases: Once separated and dry, take a m.p. of each to determine the identity. Take melting points the following week. Neutrals:

  4. Chapter 5: Procedure 1 Example: Separate these three components 1. Use a flow chart to visualize how the separation will work. 2. See photos/video.

  5. Chapter 5: Procedure 1 Once the separation is complete: • Dry each, weigh and calculate % recoveries (assume you started with equal amounts of each) • Take a m.p. of each to determine identities • Either take an IR of the acidic component OR an NMR of the neutral component

  6. Chapter 5: Procedure 2 Extraction of caffeine: 1. Use tea bags (odd # desks) or coffee bags (even # desks) 2. Steep tea or coffee bags in hot water 3. Extract aqueous solution with dichloromethane (CH2Cl2) to isolate caffeine • Purify caffeine by sublimation • Weigh caffeine. • Compare caffeine content in tea and coffee with hoodmate’s data; reference data. caffeine

  7. Chapter 5: Procedure 2 Extraction of caffeine: For extraction, use a separatory funnel; Get a demo from your TA. *A few, smaller extractions are better than one big extraction.* Vent funnel while shaking. Aqueous layer: tea/coffee solution Organic layer: dichloromethane/caffeine Separatory funnel

  8. Chapter 5: Procedure 2 Extraction of caffeine: Vent funnel while shaking. Point away from face, towards back of hood.

  9. Chapter 5: Procedure 2 Once caffeine has been isolated, purify via sublimation (heat solid  gas  pure solid). Weigh the isolated caffeine and calculate the amount of caffeine per gram of tea or coffee. Compare data with hoodmate; reference the data.

More Related