Upozornenie: Prezeranie týchto stránok je určené len pre návštevníkov nad 18 rokov!
Zásady ochrany osobných údajov.
Používaním tohto webu súhlasíte s uchovávaním cookies, ktoré slúžia na poskytovanie služieb, nastavenie reklám a analýzu návštevnosti. OK, súhlasím









A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9

Precipitation (chemistry)
 
Principle of chemical precipitation in aqueous solution

In an aqueous solution, precipitation is the "sedimentation of a solid material (a precipitate) from a liquid solution".[1][2] The solid formed is called the precipitate.[3] In case of an inorganic chemical reaction leading to precipitation, the chemical reagent causing the solid to form is called the precipitant.[4]

The clear liquid remaining above the precipitated or the centrifuged solid phase is also called the supernate or supernatant.

The notion of precipitation can also be extended to other domains of chemistry (organic chemistry and biochemistry) and even be applied to the solid phases (e.g. metallurgy and alloys) when solid impurities segregate from a solid phase.

Supersaturation

The precipitation of a compound may occur when its concentration exceeds its solubility. This can be due to temperature changes, solvent evaporation, or by mixing solvents. Precipitation occurs more rapidly from a strongly supersaturated solution.

The formation of a precipitate can be caused by a chemical reaction. When a barium chloride solution reacts with sulphuric acid, a white precipitate of barium sulfate is formed. When a potassium iodide solution reacts with a lead(II) nitrate solution, a yellow precipitate of lead(II) iodide is formed.

Inorganic chemistry

Precipitate formation is useful in the detection of the type of cation in a salt. To do this, an alkali first reacts with the unknown salt to produce a precipitate that is the hydroxide of the unknown salt. To identify the cation, the color of the precipitate and its solubility in excess are noted. Similar processes are often used in sequence – for example, a barium nitrate solution will react with sulfate ions to form a solid barium sulfate precipitate, indicating that it is likely that sulfate ions are present.

A common example of precipitation from aqueous solution is that of silver chloride. When silver nitrate (AgNO3) is added to a solution of potassium chloride (KCl) the precipitation of a white solid (AgCl) is observed.[5][6]

The ionic equation allows to write this reaction by detailing the dissociated ions present in aqueous solution.

Reductive precipitation

Illustration of the Walden reductor. Copper from a wire is displaced by silver from a silver nitrate solution it is dipped into, and metallic silver crystals precipitate onto the copper wire.

The Walden reductor is an illustration of a reduction reaction directly accompanied by the precipitation of a less soluble compound because of its lower chemical valence:

The Walden reductor made of tiny silver crystals obtained by the immersion of a copper wire into a solution of silver nitrate is used to reduce to their lower valence any metallic ion located above the silver couple (Ag+ + 1 e → Ag) in the redox potential scale.

Colloidal suspensions

Without sufficient attraction forces (e.g., Van der Waals force) to aggregate the solid particles together and to remove them from solution by gravity (settling), they remain in suspension and form colloids. Sedimentation can be accelerated by high speed centrifugation. The compact mass thus obtained is sometimes referred to as a 'pellet'.

Digestion and precipitates ageing

Digestion, or precipitate ageing, happens when a freshly formed precipitate is left, usually at a higher temperature, in the solution from which it precipitates. It results in purer and larger recrystallized particles. The physico-chemical process underlying digestion is called Ostwald ripening.[7][8]

Organic chemistry

Crystals of meso-tetratolylporphyrin from a reflux of propionic acid precipitate on cooling. Photograph of the Büchner funnel on top of a Büchner flask.

While precipitation reactions can be used for making pigments, removing ions from solution in water treatment, and in classical qualitative inorganic analysis, precipitation is also commonly used to isolate the products of an organic reaction during workup and purification operations. Ideally, the product of the reaction is insoluble in the solvent used for the reaction. Thus, it precipitates as it is formed, preferably forming pure crystals. An example of this would be the synthesis of porphyrins in refluxing propionic acid. By cooling the reaction mixture to room temperature, crystals of the porphyrin precipitate, and are collected by filtration on a Büchner filter as illustrated by the photograph here beside:[9]

Porphyrin synthesis

Precipitation may also occur when an antisolvent (a solvent in which the product is insoluble) is added, drastically reducing the solubility of the desired product. Thereafter, the precipitate may be easily separated by decanting, filtration, or by centrifugation. An example would be the synthesis of Cr3+tetraphenylporphyrin chloride: water is added to the dimethylformamide (DMF) solution in which the reaction occurred, and the product precipitates.[10] Precipitation is useful in purifying many other products: e.g., crude bmim-Cl is taken up in acetonitrile, and dropped into ethyl acetate, where it precipitates.[11]

Biochemistry

Proteins purification and separation can be performed by precipitation in changing the nature of the solvent or the value of its relative permittivity (e.g., by replacing water by ethanol), or by increasing the ionic strength of the solution. As proteins have complex tertiary and quaternary structures due to their specific folding and various weak intermolecular interactions (e.g., hydrogen bridges), these superstructures can be modified and proteins denaturated and precipitated. Another important application of an antisolvent is in ethanol precipitation of DNA.

Metallurgy and alloys

In solid phases, precipitation occurs if the concentration of one solid is above the solubility limit in the host solid, due to e.g. rapid quenching or ion implantation, and the temperature is high enough that diffusion can lead to segregation into precipitates. Precipitation in solids is routinely used to synthesize nanoclusters.[12]

In metallurgy, precipitation from a solid solution is also a way to strengthen alloys.

Precipitation of ceramic phases in metallic alloys such as zirconium hydrides in zircaloy cladding of nuclear fuel pins can also render metallic alloys brittle and lead to their mechanical failure. Correctly mastering the precise temperature and pressure conditions when cooling down spent nuclear fuels is therefore essential to avoid damaging their cladding and to preserve the integrity of the spent fuel elements on the long term in dry storage casks and in geological disposal conditions.

Industrial processes

Hydroxide precipitation is probably the most widely used industrial precipitation process in which metal hydroxides are formed by adding calcium hydroxide (slaked lime) or sodium hydroxide (caustic soda) as precipitant.

History

Powders derived from different precipitation processes have also historically been known as 'flowers'.

See also

References

  1. ^ "precipitation". IUPAC Gold Book.
  2. ^ "Chemical precipitation". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
  3. ^ "precipitate". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
  4. ^ "precipitant". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
  5. ^ Zumdahl, Steven S.; DeCoste, Donald J. (2012). Chemical Principles. Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-1-133-71013-4.
  6. ^ Zumdahl, Steven S.; DeCoste, Donald J. (2018). Introductory Chemistry: A Foundation. Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-1-337-67132-3.
  7. ^ Vengrenovitch, R.D. (1982). "On the Ostwald ripening theory". Acta Metallurgica. 30 (6): 1079–1086. doi:10.1016/0001-6160(82)90004-9. ISSN 0001-6160.
  8. ^ Voorhees, P.W. (1985). "The theory of Ostwald ripening". Journal of Statistical Physics. 38 (1–2): 231–252. Bibcode:1985JSP....38..231V. doi:10.1007/BF01017860. ISSN 0022-4715. S2CID 14865117.
  9. ^ A. D. Adler; F. R. Longo; J. D. Finarelli; J. Goldmacher; J. Assour; L. Korsakoff (1967). "A simplified synthesis for meso-tetraphenylporphine". J. Org. Chem. 32 (2): 476. doi:10.1021/jo01288a053.
  10. ^ Alan D. Adler; Frederick R. Longo; Frank Kampas; Jean Kim (1970). "On the preparation of metalloporphyrins". Journal of Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry. 32 (7): 2443. doi:10.1016/0022-1902(70)80535-8.
  11. ^ Dupont, J., Consorti, C., Suarez, P., de Souza, R. (2004). "Preparation of 1-Butyl-3-methyl imidazolium-based room temperature ionic liquids". Organic Syntheses{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link); Collected Volumes, vol. 10, p. 184.
  12. ^ Dhara, S. (2007). "Formation, Dynamics, and Characterization of Nanostructures by Ion Beam Irradiation". Critical Reviews in Solid State and Materials Sciences. 32 (1): 1–50. Bibcode:2007CRSSM..32....1D. doi:10.1080/10408430601187624. S2CID 98639891.

Further reading

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Precipitation_(chemistry)
>Text je dostupný pod licencí Creative Commons Uveďte autora – Zachovejte licenci, případně za dalších podmínek. Podrobnosti naleznete na stránce Podmínky užití.

čítajte viac o Precipitation_(chemistry)


čítajte viac na tomto odkaze: Precipitation (chemistry)



Hladanie1.

Precipitation (disambiguation)
Precipitate (disambiguation)
Special:EditPage/Precipitation (chemistry)
Talk:Precipitation (chemistry)
Help:Maintenance template removal
Wikipedia:Splitting
Wikipedia:Disambiguation
Talk:Precipitation (chemistry)
File:Question book-new.svg
Wikipedia:Verifiability
Special:EditPage/Precipitation (chemistry)
Help:Referencing for beginners
Help:Maintenance template removal
Help:Maintenance template removal
File:Chemical precipitation diagram multilang.svg
Aqueous solution
Centrifuge
Organic chemistry
Biochemistry
Metallurgy
Alloy
Segregation (materials science)
Supersaturation
Solubility
Barium chloride
Sulfuric acid
Barium sulfate
Potassium iodide
Lead(II) nitrate
Lead(II) iodide
Qualitative inorganic analysis
Cation
Salt (chemistry)
Alkali
Hydroxide
Barium nitrate
Sulfate
Barium sulfate
Silver chloride
Silver nitrate
Potassium chloride
Ionic equation
Dissociation (chemistry)
Ions
File:Precipitation of Silver on Copper 1.jpg
Walden reductor
Single displacement reaction
Silver nitrate
Walden reductor
Reduction reaction
Silver
Copper
Silver nitrate
Redox potential
Van der Waals force
Settling
Suspension (chemistry)
Colloids
Sedimentation
Laboratory centrifuge
Temperature
Ostwald ripening
File:Tetratolylporphyrin.jpg
Reflux
Propionic acid
Büchner funnel
Büchner flask
Pigment
Water treatment
Qualitative inorganic analysis
Workup (chemistry)
Crystallization
Porphyrin
Propionic acid
Porphyrin
File:H2TPPsyn.png
Decanting
Filtration
Centrifugation
Tetraphenylporphyrin
Dimethylformamide
Bmim
Acetonitrile
Ethyl acetate
Protein
Relative permittivity
Ethanol
Ionic strength
Ethanol precipitation
DNA
Ion implantation
Segregation (materials science)
Nanoparticles
Metallurgy
Solid solution
Precipitation strengthening
Ceramic
Alloy
Zirconium hydride
Zircaloy
Nuclear fuel
Spent nuclear fuel
Metal hydroxide
Calcium hydroxide
Sodium hydroxide
History of chemistry
Coprecipitation
Effervescence
Precipitate-free zone
Salting in
Salting out
Encyclopedia Britannica
Merriam-Webster
Merriam-Webster
ISBN (identifier)
Special:BookSources/978-1-133-71013-4
ISBN (identifier)
Special:BookSources/978-1-337-67132-3
Doi (identifier)
ISSN (identifier)
Bibcode (identifier)
Doi (identifier)
ISSN (identifier)
S2CID (identifier)
J. Org. Chem.
Doi (identifier)
Doi (identifier)
Organic Syntheses
Template:Cite journal
Category:CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list
Bibcode (identifier)
Doi (identifier)
S2CID (identifier)
ISBN (identifier)
Special:BookSources/0-618-37206-7
Category:Solid precipitation
Help:Authority control
Q113796#identifiers
Precipitation (chemistry)
Precipitation (chemistry)
Main Page
Wikipedia:Contents
Portal:Current events
Special:Random
Wikipedia:About
Wikipedia:Contact us
Special:FundraiserRedirector?utm source=donate&utm medium=sidebar&utm campaign=C13 en.wikipedia.org&uselang=en
Help:Contents
Help:Introduction
Wikipedia:Community portal
Special:RecentChanges
Wikipedia:File upload wizard
Main Page
Special:Search
Help:Introduction
Special:MyContributions
Special:MyTalk
ترسيب (كيمياء)
Tîm-té
Преципитация (химия)
Precipitacija
Precipitació química
Ӳкев
Srážení (chemie)
Fällung
Sadestamine (keemia)
Καταβύθιση
Precipitado
Precipitado (kemio)
Hauspeatze
ته‌نشینی (شیمی)
Précipité
Deascadh (ceimic)
Precipitación (reacción)
침전
अवक्षेपण
Precipito
Reaksi pengendapan
Precipitazione (chimica)
תגובת שיקוע
Преципитация реакциясы
Presipite
Siky
Neerslag (scheikunde)
沈殿
Fellingsreaksjon
Fellingsreaksjon
Strącanie
Precipitação (química)
Precipitare (chimie)
Осаждение
Chemical precipitation
Obarjanje
Талог
Talog
Présipitasi
Saostaminen (kemia)
Utfällning
வீழ்படிவு
అవక్షేపణ
Çökelme (kimya)
Преципітація (хімія)
عمل ترسیب
Kết tủa
沉澱
沉澱
沉淀
Special:EntityPage/Q113796#sitelinks-wikipedia
Precipitation (chemistry)
Talk:Precipitation (chemistry)
Precipitation (chemistry)
Precipitation (chemistry)
Special:WhatLinksHere/Precipitation (chemistry)
Special:RecentChangesLinked/Precipitation (chemistry)
Wikipedia:File Upload Wizard
Special:SpecialPages
Special:EntityPage/Q113796
Category:Solid precipitation
Precipitation (chemistry)
Precipitation (chemistry)
Main Page
Wikipedia:Contents
Portal:Current events
Special:Random
Wikipedia:About
Wikipedia:Contact us
Special:FundraiserRedirector?utm source=donate&utm medium=sidebar&utm campaign=C13 en.wikipedia.org&uselang=en
Help:Contents
Help:Introduction
Wikipedia:Community portal
Special:RecentChanges
Wikipedia:File upload wizard
Main Page
Special:Search
Help:Introduction
Special:MyContributions
Special:MyTalk
ترسيب (كيمياء)
Tîm-té
Преципитация (химия)
Precipitacija
Precipitació química
Ӳкев
Srážení (chemie)
Fällung
Sadestamine (keemia)
Καταβύθιση
Precipitado
Precipitado (kemio)
Hauspeatze
ته‌نشینی (شیمی)
Précipité
Deascadh (ceimic)
Precipitación (reacción)
침전
अवक्षेपण
Precipito
Reaksi pengendapan
Precipitazione (chimica)
תגובת שיקוע
Преципитация реакциясы
Presipite
Siky
Neerslag (scheikunde)
沈殿
Fellingsreaksjon
Fellingsreaksjon
Strącanie
Precipitação (química)
Precipitare (chimie)
Осаждение
Chemical precipitation
Obarjanje
Талог
Talog
Présipitasi
Saostaminen (kemia)
Utfällning
வீழ்படிவு
అవక్షేపణ
Çökelme (kimya)
Преципітація (хімія)
عمل ترسیب
Kết tủa
沉澱
沉澱
沉淀
Special:EntityPage/Q113796#sitelinks-wikipedia
Precipitation (chemistry)
Talk:Precipitation (chemistry)
Precipitation (chemistry)
Precipitation (chemistry)
Special:WhatLinksHere/Precipitation (chemistry)
Special:RecentChangesLinked/Precipitation (chemistry)
Wikipedia:File Upload Wizard
Special:SpecialPages
Special:EntityPage/Q113796
Category:Solid precipitation
Precipitation (chemistry)
Precipitation (chemistry)
Main Page
Wikipedia:Contents
Portal:Current events
Special:Random
Wikipedia:About
Wikipedia:Contact us
Special:FundraiserRedirector?utm source=donate&utm medium=sidebar&utm campaign=C13 en.wikipedia.org&uselang=en
Help:Contents
Help:Introduction
Wikipedia:Community portal
Special:RecentChanges
Wikipedia:File upload wizard
Main Page
Special:Search
Help:Introduction
Special:MyContributions
Special:MyTalk
ترسيب (كيمياء)
Tîm-té
Updating...x




Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok.
Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.