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Help identifying compound


The_simpsons

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So i have a unknown chemical compound that is a white powder, very soluble in water (polar). But it doesn't conduct electricity in solution at all so i can probably exclude it's ionic. Also, when you heat it up in a bunsenburner it doesn't melt or combust, it stays pretty much the same, a stable powder. pH seemed kinda neutral in solution.

 

Does anybody have any idea how i can further test for which compound it is? First it seemed like a carbohydrate but since it doesn't melt or combust after prolonged heating i doubt it. Any ideas of what it might be or any new tests i can make to help identify it?

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some of this doesn`t quite seem right?

 

reading it at 1`st you`de think Sugar, but then that Does burn!

when you mention the ph "pH seemed kinda neutral in solution. "

that doesn`t sound Very sure?

 

I`m wondering if the soln was slightly Basic perhaps and the powder was Sodium Silicate (Waterglass).

 

not too sure on it`s conductivity though?

 

I honestly cannot think of Anything Chemical that would respond in the way you`ve stated.

have you tried to see How soluble it is in a given quantity of water, and have you tried looking at Crystals of this to get an idea of it`s Molecular shape?

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Well i have acess to a high school chem lab, and the project was to identify an unknown solution in my current chemistry course.

 

Today though i found out it was a actually a salt, just a big salt, so it was harder to get a reading with a dip electrode, but with higher concentration it worked. It also gave a strong precipitation with Ba2+, so it's possibly a sulphate or a chromate. So im right on track again. Prepared the salt with several metals and im gonna see next week if the metal ion off the salt change place with the less noble metal.

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It conducted after we added a higher concentration. If it was a bigger ionic compound than, say sodium chloride, which we compared conductivity with, we figured we needed more of the salt. After 2-3 times more of the unknown salt in relation to sodium chloride, it gave a similar conductivity as the NaCl-solution .

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Hmmm... I`m thinking it`s a sulphate also, maybe Magnesium Sulphate for instance.

 

not Chrome as most all are Colored (and they probably wouldn`t let you use that anyway).

 

add a little NaOH soln to it, you should also get a white ppt if it`s an MG salt.

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  • 2 weeks later...
Hmmm... I`m thinking it`s a sulphate also, maybe Magnesium Sulphate for instance.

 

not Chrome as most all are Colored (and they probably wouldn`t let you use that anyway).

 

add a little NaOH soln to it, you should also get a white ppt if it`s an MG salt.

 

Could be magnesium sulphate, but it could also be zinc sulphate or something else. NeonBlack's suggestion of a flame test is a good idea.

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I will agree with you on this point, but Only because the Conductivity test wasn`t performed correctly.

 

Mg will not plate out, Zn will! ;)

 

either way, the PPT when dried and heated will determine the Zn from the Mg, because Zinc oxide turns slightly Yellow above a certain temp :)

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