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Experiments for 'potassium chromate'
Below follows a summary of all experiments, matching your
search. Click one of the EXPERIMENT hyperlinks for a complete description of the
experiment.
Results for 'potassium chromate':
EXPERIMENT 1 --------------- Potassium dichromate is sparingly soluble in thionyl chloride, giving an intensely colored red/orange/brown solution, which on addition to water at once becomes green with a blue hue. Potassium chromate does not dissolve in thionyl chloride. The solid changes color from yellow to yellow/orange, and the solution becomes slightly colored, but this faint reaction may be due to minor impurities in the potassium chromate or thionyl chloride. If any potassium chromate dissolves, then it is a very small amount.
EXPERIMENT 2 --------------- Potassium dichromate dissolves in methanol, albeit not as well as in water. Potassium chromate hardly dissolves in methanol. When ammonium thiocyanate is added, then the liquid becomes deep yellow. Is this due to chromate, or is this some reaction product from the thiocyanate?
EXPERIMENT 3 --------------- Chromium (III) is not reduced to chromium (II) by borohydride. Alkaline chromium (VI) is only reduced slowly by borohydrode. On acidification the reduction goes at once, but no further than the +3 oxidation state.
EXPERIMENT 4 --------------- Thallium(I) chromate and thallium(I) dichromate both are insoluble (or at most marginally soluble) in water. Thallium(I) is not a sufficiently strong reductor to get the hexavalent chromium reduced.
EXPERIMENT 5 --------------- Dichromate and chromate both quickly are oxidized by pure formic acid, resulting in a fairly violent and exothermic reaction, in which a dark purple/blue/grey compound is formed.
End of results for 'potassium chromate'
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