Required practical 6: Investigating chromatography
Objective
Investigate how paper chromatography can be used to separate and identify a mixture of food colourings
Hypothesis
Rf values can be used to identify the components of an unknown mixture by comparison with Rf values of known substances
Materials
- A 250 cm3 beaker
- A wooden spill
- A rectangle of chromatography paper
- Four known food colourings labelled A–D
- An unknown mixture of food colourings labelled U
- Five glass capillary tubes
- Paper clip
- Ruler & pencil
Chromatography apparatus
Diagram of the apparatus needed
Practical tip
The pencil line must never be below the level of the solvent as the samples will be washed away
Method
- Use a ruler to draw a horizontal pencil line 2 cm from the end of the chromatography paper
- Use a different capillary tube to put a tiny spot of each colouring A, B, C and D on the line
- Use the fifth tube to put a small spot of the unknown mixture U on the line
- Make sure each spot is no more than 2-3 mm in diameter and label each spot in pencil
- Pour water into the beaker to a depth of no more than 1 cm and clip the top of the chromatography paper to the wooden spill. The top end is the furthest from the spots
- Carefully rest the wooden spill on the top edge of the beaker. The bottom edge of the paper should dip into the solvent
- Allow the solvent to travel undisturbed at least three quarters of the way up the paper
- Remove the paper and draw another pencil line on the dry part of the paper as close to the wet edge as possible. This is called the solvent front line
- Measure the distance in mm between the two pencil lines. This is the distance travelled by the water solvent
- For each food colour A, B, C and D measure the distance in mm from the start line to the middle of the spot
Results
Record your results in a suitable table
Food colouring | Distance in mm | Rf value | |
Solvent | Spot | ||
A | 5 | 2.5 | 0.5 |
B | 5 | 1.8 | 0.36 |
Evaluation
- The Rf values of food colours A, B, C and D should be compared to that for the unknown sample as well as a visual comparison being made
Conclusion
- The use of chromatography and Rf values is a viable method of identifying unknown mixtures given reference material