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Summary Chapter 2 - Experimental Techniques

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These summary notes are all according to the CIE IGCSE Chemistry specification and syllabus. They cover everything required by the syllabus and include labelled diagrams gotten from many useful sources. The notes were used by a student who achieved a 9 in the subject.

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TOPIC 2 – Experimental Techniques


· Appropriate apparatus for MEASURING:
- Time: stopwatch/clock
- Temperature: thermometer
- Mass: balance
- Volume: measuring cylinder, burette, pipette

· PAPER CHROMATOGRAPHY:
- Used to separate mixtures and give information to help identify substances.
- Involves a stationary phase and a mobile phase.
- Separation depends on the distribution of substances between the phases.
- To carry it out: place the substances on line near bottom of paper, place the paper in the solvent and
observe how far the substances travel up the paper.

·Interpreting chromatograms:




- If two substances are the same, they will show up the same on the paper.
- Pure substances will only produce one spot and impure substance (or a mixture) will produce two
or more spots because it will separate on the paper to show all the different components as
separate spots.
- You can analyse colourless mixtures of chemicals if the ‘spots’ can be coloured by a chemical or light
treatment; these are all known as locating agents.

· RF Values:
- RF Value = distance moved by substance ÷ distance moved by solvent
- Different compounds have different Rf values in different solvents, which can be used to help
identify the compounds.
- Compounds in a mixture may separate into different spots depending on the solvent but a pure
compound will produce a single spot in all solvents.

· PURITY OF SUBSTANCES:
- A pure substance = a single element or compound, not mixed with any other substance.
- Pure substances melt and boil at specific temperatures.
- Mixture melt over a range of temperatures due to them consisting of 2 or more elements/compounds.
- To have a pure substance for food or drugs is very important as impurities could be dangerous even in
small amounts.
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