The solubility products of silver halides

Article no. P7401700 | Type: Experiments

grades 7-10, grades 10-13
10 Minutes
10 Minutes
heavy
Pupils

Also part of:

Student Set Electrochemistry for 29 experiments, TESS advanced Chemistry ECH

Article no. 25307-88 | Type: Set

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Principle

When a few drops of a very dilute silver nitrate solution (c =0.01 mol/l) are added to a 1 molar solution of potassium halide solution (= KCl, KBr, KI), then there is an immediate precipitation of the corresponding silver halide (AgCl, AgBr, AgI), because the solubility product of these only very sparingly soluble salts is already exceeded even by these small amounts of added silver ions. Only that number of silver ions can remain free in these silver halide solutions, as are allowed to do so by the solubility product. As the relationship between the difference in concentration and the voltage in a concentration series follows the Nernst equation, the solubility product, or the silver ion concentration, of each silver halide solution can be calculated from the appropriate measured voltage.

 

Learning objectives

  •  Influence of the solubility on the electrochemcial potential

 

Benefits

  • Easy teaching and efficient learning by using interactive experimentation PHYWE-Software
  • Experiment is part of a complete solution set with experiments for the topic Electrochemistry matched with international curriculum: all topics are covered

 

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