Testing for Aqueous Anions (OCR Gateway GCSE Chemistry)

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Testing for Carbonate Ions

  • Carbonates all contain the carbonate ion, CO32-
  • The test for this ion involves adding dilute acid and testing the gas released
  • If a carbonate compound is present then effervescence should be seen and the gas produced is CO2 which forms a white precipitate of calcium carbonate when bubbled through limewater:


CO32- (aq) + 2H+ (aq) → CO2 (g) + H2O (l)

CO2 (g) + Ca(OH)2 (aq) → CaCO3 (s) + H2O (l)

Test for Carbon Dioxide, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Limewater turns milky in the presence of CO2 caused by formation of insoluble calcium carbonate

Examiner Tip

Make sure you talk about bubbling the suspected carbon dioxide gas through the limewater.

If describing the practical you’ll need to connect the test tube of the suspected ion to the test tube of limewater quickly so none of the CO2 escapes.

Testing for Sulfate Ions

  • Acidify the sample with dilute hydrochloric acid and then add a few drops of aqueous barium chloride
  • If a sulfate is present then a white precipitate of barium sulfate is formed:

Ba2+ (aq) + SO42- (aq) → BaSO4 (s)

  • The test can also be carried out with barium nitrate solution

Sulfate Ion Test, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

A white precipitate of barium sulfate is a positive result for the presence of sulfate ions

Examiner Tip

Don't forget to say about adding the HCl first; this is added first to remove any carbonates which may be present. Carbonates would also produce a white precipitate and  interfere with the results.

Testing for Halide Ions

  • Acidify the sample with dilute nitric acid (HNO3) followed by the addition of silver nitrate solution, AgNO3
  • The acidification is done to remove carbonate ions that might give a false positive result
  • If a halide ion is present it forms a silver halide precipitate:

Ag+ (aq) + X(aq) → AgX (s)

  • Depending on the halide present, a different coloured precipitate is formed, allowing for identification of the halide ion
  • Silver chloride precipitate is white, silver bromide precipitate is cream and silver iodide precipitate is yellow

The-silver-halide-precipitates, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Each silver halide produces a precipitate of a different colour

Examiner Tip

The acidification step in the halide ion test must be done with nitric acid rather than hydrochloric acid, as HCl contains chloride ions itself which would interfere with the results to produce a white precipitate!

Make sure you use the colours stated for the precipitates and not deviations such as 'milky' or 'lemon' coloured.

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Jennifer

Author: Jennifer

Expertise: Chemistry

Jenny graduated in 'Chemistry for Drug Discovery' from the University of Bath in 2006, followed by her PGCE in secondary science, and has been teaching chemistry to 11-18 year olds ever since. She has taught GCSE and A-level chemistry for over 16 years and been a Director of Science for over 6 years, as well as tutoring and writing science books. Jenny loves helping students to understand the core concepts in chemistry and the links between topics, so is now happily working at Save My Exams to support more students to succeed in their learning.