07 Rate of Reaction
08 Manufacture Substances in Industries
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6.9 Preparation of Salts

Short Answer Questions

  1. What is the general reaction equation for the neutralisation method of preparing salts?
    Acid + Alkali → Salt + Water
  2. Give an example of a neutralisation reaction that forms a soluble salt.
    HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) → NaCl(aq) + H₂O(l)
  3. What type of metal reacts with acids to produce a salt and hydrogen gas?
    Reactive metals.
  4. Write the balanced chemical equation for the reaction of zinc with hydrochloric acid.
    2HCl(aq) + Zn(s) → ZnCl₂(aq) + H₂(g)
  5. What are the products when an acid reacts with a metal carbonate?
    A salt, water, and carbon dioxide.
  6. Give an example of an acid reacting with a metal carbonate to form a soluble salt.
    2HCl(aq) + CaCO₃(s) → CaCl₂(aq) + H₂O(l) + CO₂(g)
  7. What is precipitation in salt preparation?
    The formation of an insoluble salt when two soluble salt solutions are mixed.
  8. Write a chemical equation for the precipitation of barium sulfate.
    BaCl₂(aq) + Na₂SO₄(aq) → BaSO₄(s) + 2NaCl(aq)
  9. How is an insoluble salt separated from a reaction mixture?
    By filtration.
  10. What is the purpose of crystallisation in salt preparation?
    To obtain pure solid salt crystals from a solution.
  11. What are the two main methods used to prepare soluble salts?
    Neutralisation and reaction with metals, metal oxides, or metal carbonates.
  12. What is the role of cooling in the crystallisation process?
    It decreases the solubility of the salt, allowing crystals to form.
  13. What happens when lead(II) nitrate and potassium iodide solutions are mixed?
    Lead(II) iodide (PbI₂) precipitates out.
  14. Write the equation for the formation of lead(II) iodide.
    Pb(NO₃)₂(aq) + 2KI(aq) → PbI₂(s) + 2KNO₃(aq)
  15. What is the final step in the preparation of an insoluble salt?
    Drying the salt.
  16. Which factors affect the crystal size in crystallisation?
    The rate of cooling and the concentration of the solution.
  17. What is recrystallisation used for?
    Purifying salt crystals by dissolving them in a hot solvent and cooling.
  18. What determines the shape of a salt crystal?
    The nature of the salt and the conditions of crystallisation.
  19. Why do salts form crystalline structures?
    Because of the orderly arrangement of ions in a lattice.

Explanation Questions

  1. Why do neutralisation reactions produce soluble salts?
    The reaction forms water and a salt, which remains dissolved in the solution.
  2. Why is hydrogen gas released when a reactive metal reacts with an acid?
    The metal displaces hydrogen ions, forming hydrogen gas.
  3. Why does the reaction between acids and metal oxides produce water?
    The oxide ions (O²⁻) combine with hydrogen ions (H⁺) to form water (H₂O).
  4. How can crystallisation be used to purify salts?
    Impurities remain in solution while pure salt crystals form as the solution cools.
  5. Why do different salts form different crystal shapes?
    The arrangement of ions in the lattice varies based on their size and charge.
  6. Why is slow cooling important in crystallisation?
    Slow cooling allows larger, well-formed crystals to develop.
  7. Why do precipitates form in double decomposition reactions?
    The new salt formed is insoluble and separates as a solid.
  8. How does washing improve the purity of precipitated salts?
    It removes any soluble impurities left on the surface of the salt crystals.
  9. What determines whether a salt is soluble or insoluble?
    The interactions between the salt’s ions and water molecules.
  10. Why do we use filtration in the preparation of insoluble salts?
    To separate the solid precipitate from the liquid solution.