Prepare a Soluble Salt (Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry)
Revision Note
Written by: Stewart Hird
Reviewed by: Lucy Kirkham
Did this video help you?
Prepare a soluble salt
A soluble salt can be made from the reaction of an acid with an insoluble base
During the preparation of soluble salts, the insoluble reactant is added in excess to ensure that all of the acid has reacted
If this step is not completed, any unreacted acid would become dangerously concentrated during evaporation and crystallisation
The excess reactant is then removed by filtration to ensure that only the salt and water remain
Since all of the acid has reacted and the excess solid base has been removed then the solution left can only be salt and water
The water is evaporated by heating until small crystals begin to appear
This is typically once half of the water is left
Allowing the filtered solution to evaporate slowly over a period of days results in the formation of larger crystals
If a carbonate was used as the solid base instead of an oxide or hydroxide, then any carbon dioxide gas produced would have been released into the atmosphere
A common example is the preparation of copper(II) sulfate which can be made with copper(II) oxide and dilute sulfuric acid:
CuO (s) + H2SO4 (aq) ⟶ CuSO4 (aq) + H2O (l)
Copper sulfate crystals
After filtering and heating copper sulfate crystals will form. Larger crystals will form if the water in the solution is left to evaporate slowly
Photo by Wikimedia commons
The acid could also be reacted with a metal to produce the salt, as long as the metal is above hydrogen in the reactivity series and not too reactive so that a dangerous reaction does not take place
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Exam questions often ask why the solid oxide is added in excess. This is done to avoid leaving any unreacted acid which would become dangerously concentrated during evaporation and crystallization.
Last updated:
You've read 0 of your 5 free revision notes this week
Sign up now. It’s free!
Did this page help you?