Separation Techniques (Edexcel GCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Stewart Hird

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Simple Distillation

Methods of purification

  • The choice of the method of separation depends on the nature of the substances being separated.

  • All methods rely on there being a difference of some sort, usually in a physical property such as boiling point, between the substances being separated

  • Five common techniques are distillation, fractional distillation, filtration, crystallisation and chromatography

Simple Distillation

  • This is used to separate a liquid and soluble solid from a solution (e.g., water from a solution of salt water) or a pure liquid from a mixture of liquids

  • The solution is heated, and pure water evaporates producing a vapour which rises through the neck of the round bottomed flask

  • The vapour passes through the condenser, where it cools and condenses, turning into the pure liquid that is collected in a beaker

  • After all the water is evaporated from the solution, only the solid solute will be left behind

Simple distillation of saltwater, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Diagram showing the distillation of a mixture of salt and water

Examiner Tips and Tricks

If asked to draw or label a diagram of simple distillation, make sure that the water goes in at the bottom of the condenser near the collecting beaker, and comes out at the top near the column.

Fractional Distillation

  • This is used to separate two or more liquids that are miscible with one another (e.g., ethanol and water from a mixture of the two)

  • The solution is heated to the temperature of the substance with the lowest boiling point

  • This substance will rise and evaporate first, and vapours will pass through a condenser, where they cool and condense, turning into a liquid that will be collected in a beaker

  • All of the substance is evaporated and collected, leaving behind the other components(s) of the mixture

  • For water and ethanol

    • Ethanol has a boiling point of 78 ºC and water of 100 ºC

    • The mixture is heated until it reaches 78 ºC, at which point the ethanol boils and distills out of the mixture and condenses into the beaker

  • When the temperature starts to increase to 100 ºC heating should be stopped. Water and ethanol are now separated

Fractional distillation of a mixture of ethanol and water, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Fractional distillation of a mixture of ethanol and water

Filtration

  • Used to separate an undissolved solid from a mixture of the solid and a liquid / solution ( e.g., sand from a mixture of sand and water)

    • Centrifugation can also be used for this mixture

  • A piece of filter paper is placed in a filter funnel above a beaker

  • A mixture of insoluble solid and liquid is poured into the filter funnel

  • The filter paper will only allow small liquid particles to pass through as filtrate

  • Solid particles are too large to pass through the filter paper so will stay behind as a residue

Filtration of sand & water, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Filtration of a mixture of sand and water

Crystallisation

  • Used to separate a dissolved solid from a solution, when the solid is much more soluble in hot solvent than in cold (e.g., copper sulphate from a solution of copper (II) sulphate in water)

  • The solution is heated, allowing the solvent to evaporate, leaving a saturated solution behind

  • Test if the solution is saturated by dipping a clean, dry, cold glass rod into the solution

    • If the solution is saturated, crystals will form on the glass rod

  • The saturated solution is allowed to cool slowly

  • Crystals begin to grow as solids will come out of solution due to decreasing solubility

  • The crystals are collected by filtering the solution, they are washed with cold distilled water to remove impurities and are then allowed to dry

Process-Of Crystallisation, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Diagram showing the process of crystallisation

Paper Chromatography

  • This technique is used to separate substances that have different solubilities in a given solvent (e.g., different coloured inks that have been mixed to make black ink)

  • A pencil line is drawn on chromatography paper and spots of the sample are placed on it. Pencil is used for this as ink would run into the chromatogram along with the samples

  • The paper is then lowered into the solvent container, making sure that the pencil line sits above the level of the solvent, so the samples don’t wash into the solvent container

  • The solvent travels up the paper by capillary action, taking some of the coloured substances with it

  • Different substances have different solubilities so will travel at different rates, causing the substances to spread apart

    • Those substances with higher solubility will travel further than the others

  • This will show the different components of the ink / dye

  • If two or more substances are the same, they will produce identical chromatograms

  • If the substance is a mixture, it will separate on the paper to show all the different components as separate spots

  • An impure substance will show up with more than one spot, a pure substance should only show up with one spot

Using paper chromatography to separate soluble mixtures, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Analysis of the composition of ink using paper chromatography

Examiner Tips and Tricks

Paper chromatography is the name given to the overall separation technique while a chromatogram is the name given to the visual output of a chromatography run. This is the piece of chromatography paper with the visibly separated components after the run has finished.

The initial line must be drawn in pencil because if you used ink this would smudge or run in the water!

The solvent level must not start above the pencil line, or this will ruin the chromatogram.

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Stewart Hird

Author: Stewart Hird

Expertise: Chemistry Lead

Stewart has been an enthusiastic GCSE, IGCSE, A Level and IB teacher for more than 30 years in the UK as well as overseas, and has also been an examiner for IB and A Level. As a long-standing Head of Science, Stewart brings a wealth of experience to creating Topic Questions and revision materials for Save My Exams. Stewart specialises in Chemistry, but has also taught Physics and Environmental Systems and Societies.