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Description of experiment
Below follows a plain text transcript of the selected
experiment.
Needed compounds: ----------------- sulphuric acid : H2SO4 sodium nitrite : NaNO2 chromium (III) chloride hexahydrate : CrCl3.6H2O
Class: ------ elem=N,Cr coordination
Summary: -------- Chromium (III) chloride initially gives a green solution in water, which on standing turns violet/grey. The chromium/chloride complex slowly is changed to plain aqueous chromium and free chloride ion. This takes a few days before completion. With nitrite ions, a purple complex is formed.
Description: ------------ Sequence 1: ------------ Add some dark green chromium chloride (hexahydrate) to water: The solid quickly dissolves and the liquid becomes deep green. The green color is a really nice and saturated color.
Add a spatula full of sodium nitrite to the green solution: The solid quickly dissolves and the liquid remains green. In the course of a few minutes, however, the color changes to a bright and deep red/purple.
Heat the liquid, until it almost starts boiling: A colorless gas is evolved, the gas mixture above the liquid turns light brown. The liquid itself turns green, but not as bright and saturated as the initial green color. The colorless gas most likely is NO.
Sequence 2: ----------- Add some dark green chromium chloride (hexahydrate) to water: The solid quickly dissolves and the liquid becomes deep green. The green color is a really nice and saturated color.
Let the liquid stand for at least a few days: The color has changed to a purplish/grey/blue shade, just as plain aqueous chromium (III) ions. So, the chloro-complex is converted to a plain aqua-complex, the chloride ligands are replaced by water ligands.
Add a spatula full of sodium nitrite to the grey/purple/blue solution: The solid quickly dissolves and the liquid turns dull green. In the course of a few minutes, however, the color changes to bright and deep red/purple, just as in sequence one. So, the end-result is the same.
Add some dilute sulphuric acid: A colorless gas is produced and the air above the mix becomes brown. The liquid becomes dull blue. The color resembles that of plain aqueous chromium ion, but it is somewhat more blue. So, either there still is some complex formation with nitrite, NO or NO2 or the blue color is due to some N2O3 in the liquid.
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