woelen
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Registered: 20-8-2005
Location: Netherlands
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Mood: interested
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Nice complex and precipitate of sodium chlorite
I did an interesting experiment with sodium chlorite and copper sulfate, making a bright green complex/precipitate of copper(II) chlorite. This stuff
is quite interesting. I did not make a full web page about this experiment, but it is sufficiently interesting to share it with you.
I recently made a database and an accompanying application, which allows me to add experiments easily and quickly. It is my online lab journal and
replaces my paper record.
Here follows the latest experiment: https://woelen.homescience.net/expviewer
You can find the experiment I did by searching by experiment by ID and typing number 655.
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DraconicAcid
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Neat. Have you analyzed the solid material for %Cu?
I love the database idea. Too many times I've done an experiment, and then been unable to find the write-up when I needed it because I couldn't
remember which lab notebook I wrote it down in.
Please remember: "Filtrate" is not a verb.
Write up your lab reports the way your instructor wants them, not the way your ex-instructor wants them.
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Diachrynic
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Very nice woelen! I checked Gmelins handbook in hopes of finding a definite answer, but it seems that the copper chlorites aren't well explored. They
make mention of a salt Cu(ClO2)2, yellow-brown, that is shock-sensitive and turns green within a day. They also mention the
basic salt Cu(ClO2)2 ยท 3 Cu(OH)2, not shock-sensitive, but no color is mentioned in Gmelin.
They quote G. R. Levi, C. Cipollone, Gazz. Chim. Ital. 53 I [1923] 200/3. Thankfully, this is available on archive but I have also attached the relevant pages below, even if I don't speak Italian:
Attachment: gazz_53_200.pdf (69kB) This file has been downloaded 315 times
we apologize for the inconvenience
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Amos
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A yellow-brown salt that turns green in a day sounds very likely to be an anhydrous salt that hydrates in air. Seems to fall nicely in line with other
copper chemistry.
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Bezaleel
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Quote: Originally posted by woelen | I did an interesting experiment with sodium chlorite and copper sulfate, making a bright green complex/precipitate of copper(II) chlorite. This stuff
is quite interesting. I did not make a full web page about this experiment, but it is sufficiently interesting to share it with you.
I recently made a database and an accompanying application, which allows me to add experiments easily and quickly. It is my online lab journal and
replaces my paper record.
Here follows the latest experiment: https://woelen.homescience.net/expviewer
You can find the experiment I did by searching by experiment by ID and typing number 655. |
Great idea! Unfortunately, I couldn't find your experiment. Neither by entering number 655 nor by searching for "copper chlorite". I only got a page
saying "No matching experiments found".
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woelen
Super Administrator
Posts: 8011
Registered: 20-8-2005
Location: Netherlands
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Mood: interested
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Go to the webpage, select "Experiment by ID" in the blue bar at the top of the window and then enter "655" in the search field.
Searching for compounds indeed contains a small error. If there are spaces in it, then the search does not work properly. Searching for only
"chlorite" gives results. I'll fix that space issue next weekend.
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