Separation Techniques
Separation Techniques
Separation Techniques
TECHNIQUES
If a substance does not dissolve in a solvent, we say that it is insoluble. For
example, sand does not dissolve in water – it is insoluble.
Filtration is a method for separating an insoluble solid from a liquid. When a
mixture of sand and water is filtered:
• the sand stays behind in the filter paper (it becomes the residue)
• the water passes through the filter paper (it becomes the filtrate)
1. A beaker containing a mixture of insoluble solid and liquid. There is filter paper
in a filter funnel above another beaker.
2. Pour the mixture through the filter funnel.
3. Let the water drain and leave the insoluble solid to dry.
Eg. Separating sand from Salt water.
Evaporation is used to separate a soluble solid from a liquid. For example,
copper sulfate is soluble in water – its crystals dissolve in water to form copper
sulfate solution. During evaporation, the water evaporates away leaving solid
copper sulfate crystals behind.
1.
2. A solution is placed in an evaporating basin and heated with a Bunsen
burner.
3. Reduce the volume of the solution until you get a saturated solution
(concentrated solution)
4. Leave the sample to cool down and evaporate at room temperature
5. Filter the crystals from the solution and let it dry over a blotting paper.
Every pure substance has its own particular melting point and boiling point. One
way to check the purity of the separated liquid is to measure its boiling point. For
example, pure water boils at 100°C. If it contains any dissolved solids, its boiling
point will be higher than this.
Separation of liquids
• Liquids can be described in two ways –
1. immiscible -do not mix together
2. miscible – mix together
The separation technique used for each liquid depends on the properties of the
liquids.
Immiscible liquids
• Oil and water can be separated using a funnel
• Immiscible means that the liquids don't dissolve in each other – oil and
water are an example.
• It is possible to shake up the liquids and get them to mix but they soon
separate.
• Separating immiscible liquids is done simply using a separating funnel. The
two liquids are put into the funnel and are left for a short time to settle out
and form two layers.
• The tap of the funnel is opened and the bottom liquid is allowed to run. The
two liquids are now separate.
Miscible liquids
• Miscible liquids are harder to separate as they dissolve in each other.
• Miscible liquids are often separated using fractional distillation.
• This is possible as miscible liquids have different boiling points.
Fractional distillation of liquid air
You need to be able to explain how nitrogen and oxygen are obtained from the air.
• About 78 per cent of the air is nitrogen and 21 per cent is oxygen.
• These two gases can be separated by fractional distillation of liquid air.
Fractional Distillation column at an oil refinery
Liquefying the air
Fractional distillation
Air is filtered to remove dust, and then cooled in stages until it reaches –200°C. At
this temperature it is a liquid. We say that the air has been liquefied.
Here's what happens as the air liquefies:
1. Water vapour condenses, and is removed using absorbent filters
2. Carbon dioxide freezes at –79ºC, and is removed
3. Oxygen liquefies at –183ºC
4. Nitrogen liquefies at –196ºC
The liquid nitrogen and oxygen are then separated by fractional distillation.
Ex:
• Ethanol can be separated from a mixture of ethanol and water by fractional
distillation.
• This method works because the liquids in the mixture have different boiling
points.
• When the mixture is heated, one liquid evaporates before the other.
• One way to check the purity of the separated liquids is to measure their
boiling points.
• For example, pure ethanol boils at 78°C and pure water boils at 100°C
Chromatography
• Paper chromatography is a method for separating dissolved substances from
one another.
• It is often used when the dissolved substances are coloured, such as inks,
food colourings and plant dyes.
t works because some of the coloured substances dissolve in the solvent
used better than others, so they travel further up the paper.
A pencil line is drawn, and spots of ink or plant dye are placed on it. There is a
container of solvent, such as water or ethanol.1
• A pure substance will only produce one spot on the chromatogram during
paper chromatography. Two substances will be the same if they produce the
same colour of spot, and their spots travel the same distance up the paper.
• In the example below, red, blue and yellow are three pure substances. The
sample on the left is a mixture of all three.
A chromatogram, the results of a chromatography experiment
• The colours separate and move up the paper at different rates
• Chromatography can be used to separate mixtures of coloured compounds.
• Mixtures that are suitable for separation by chromatography include inks,
dyes and colouring agents in food.
Method
1. Simple chromatography is carried out on paper.
2. A spot of the mixture is placed near the bottom of a piece of
chromatography paper and the paper is then placed upright in a suitable
solvent, eg water.
3. As the solvent soaks up the paper, it carries the mixtures with it.
4. Different components of the mixture will move at different rates.
5. This separates the mixture out.
Rf values (Retardation factor) or Retention Value
• Different chromatograms and the separated components of the mixtures
can be identified by calculating the Rf value using the equation:
• The Rf value is defined as the ratio of the distance moved by the solute (i.e.
the dye or pigment under test) and the distance moved by the the solvent
(known as the Solvent front) along the paper, where both distances are
measured from the common Origin or Application Baseline, that is the point
where the sample is initially spotted on the paper
Separation of Mixtures
In a mixture, since the constituent substances do not lose their identity, they can
be separated easily by physical methods, taking advantage of the differences in
their physical properties.
Fig 1: Filtration
Mixture of Solids and Liquids
Filtration
Evaporation
Fig 2: Distillation
Distillation
Mixture of Solids
Sublimation
Extraction
In some cases, one substance in the mixture is soluble in a particular liquid solvent
whereas the other(s) is(are) insoluble in it. The process of dissolving out the
soluble component from a mixture, and subsequently treating the solution to get
the solid, is called extraction.
Magnetic Separation
A mixture with iron filings as one of the components can be separated using a
magnet to attract the iron particles away from the mixture.
Fig 4: Chromatography
Chromatography
Mixture of Liquids
Fractional Distillation
Fig 6: Gravity
Separation. (Source: NCERT,
Science IX, p. 20)
Gravity Separation