Illustrated Guide to Home Chemistry Experiments

(Amelia) #1
Chapter 9 Laboratory: Introduction to Chemical Reactions and Stoichiometry 171

LABORATORY 9 .3:


oBSERvE A SINGLE dISpLACEmENT REACTIoN


RIREEqU d EqUIpmENT ANd SUppLIES

£ goggles, gloves, and protective clothing

£ balance and weighing paper

£ test tube (2)

£ test tube rack

£ graduated cylinder, 10 mL

£ sandpaper or emery board

£ toothpicks or wood splints

£ thread or string (~15 cm)

£ aluminum granules, turnings, or shot (~1 g)

£ iron or steel nail

£ hydrochloric acid, concentrated (~5 mL)

£ copper sulfate pentahydrate (~2.5 g)

£ water

SBSTITUTIU oNS ANd modIfICATIoNS


  • You may substitute any type of scrap aluminum (such
    as aluminum foil or aluminum beverage cans) for the
    aluminum granules or shot, although the reaction
    rate may be lower. If you substitute scrap aluminum,
    use sandpaper or a similar abrasive to remove ink,
    paint, plastic coating, the oxidation layer, and other
    contaminants from its surface. Alternatively, you can
    produce aluminum filings by using a file on a piece of
    scrap aluminum stock.

  • You may substitute any form of metallic iron or steel
    for the nail, including iron filings or steel wool (be
    sure to wash steel wool to remove soap and other
    contaminants).

  • You may substitute muriatic acid from the hardware
    store for the hydrochloric acid. If you use muriatic
    acid, make sure the concentration is 30% or higher.


In a single displacement reaction, a more active


element displaces a less active element in a


compound, forming a new compound that


incorporates the more active element and


releasing the less active element in elemental


form. The reaction of an active metal with an


acid is a common type of single displacement


reaction in which the metal is oxidized to a


cationic oxidation state and the hydrogen


present in the acid is reduced to elemental


hydrogen. The fizzing and bubbling that occurs


when an active metal comes into contact with


a strong acid is caused by the emission of


gaseous hydrogen.


A nonchemist might believe that the metal “dissolves” in the acid.
That’s not true, of course. When we dissolve table salt or sugar in
water, for example, no chemical reaction occurs. We can recover
the solute unchanged, simply by evaporating the solvent. But
when we “dissolve” a metal in an acid, evaporating the liquid does
not allow us to recover the metal unchanged. Instead, the metal
has been converted to a salt by a single displacement reaction.


Different metals have different reactivity, as shown in Table 9-3.
The most active metals, such as lithium and potassium, react
(sometimes explosively) even with cold water to release hydrogen
gas. Less active metals, such as magnesium and aluminum, do
not react with cold water, but do react with steam, particularly
if the metal is finely divided and the steam is superheated. Still
less active metals, such as cobalt and nickel, do not react with
water in any form, but do react with acids to release hydrogen
gas. Finally, the least active metals, from antimony and bismuth
to platinum and gold, do not react even with acids under normal
circumstances. (Even platinum and gold do react with aqua regia,
a mixture of concentrated hydrochloric and nitric acids.)


Another common type of single displacement reaction is the
reaction of a solid metal immersed in a solution of a salt of
another metal. For example, an iron (or steel) nail immersed
in a solution of copper sulfate becomes plated, because the
copper ions are reduced to metallic copper while the iron metal
is oxidized to iron ions. If sufficient metallic iron is available,
eventually all of the copper ions are reduced, leaving metallic
copper in a solution of iron sulfate.

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