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Precipitation reactions

A lot of ionic compounds dissolve in water, dissociating into individual ions. But when two ions find each other that form an insoluble compound, they suddenly fall out of solution in what's called a precipitation reaction. In this episode of Crash Course Chemistry, we learn about precipitation, precipitates, anions, cations, and how to describe and discuss ionic reactions.

Writer: Kim Krieger
Chief Editor: Blake de Pastino
Consultant: Dr. Heiko Langner
Director/Editor: Nicholas Jenkins
Sound Designer: Michael Aranda
Graphics: Thought Cafe

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Created by EcoGeek.

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  • starky sapling style avatar for user ❁❃❋Eόwyn Evenstar❁❃❋
    Why can the silver water ( yes that was a very lay-man term, please excuses me(: )
    Turn you blue? What is the reaction that it causes?
    (14 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user
  • leaf grey style avatar for user patoof
    At around Hank mentions that the precipitate formed is silver chloride. Does this mean that there is no longer any salt (NaCl) present in the water, and that all of it has formed into silver chloride?
    (8 votes)
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    • male robot hal style avatar for user Chowdhury Amir Abdullah
      Whether or not there is still salt in the water depends on how much Silver Nitrate (AgNO3) you put into the salt-water solution.

      1. If you put just enough silver nitrate (AgNO3) to react with (NaCl) to produce AgCl, there will be no Cl ions (anions) left. That doesn't mean that Sodium (Na) reacted with Nitrate (NO3) to form Sodium Nitrate (NaNO3). Sodium and Nitrate ions stay dissolved in the solution separately because Nitrates are highly soluble in water ( at )

      2. If you put less Silver Nitrate then there will be still salt left.

      3. If you keep putting Silver Nitrate into the solution then after some time there will be no Cl ion left to react with Ag ion to precipitate AgCl. Silver and Nitrate ion would just dissolve like any Ionic compound would.
      (11 votes)
  • hopper jumping style avatar for user Spencer
    Speaking of Iron... When doctors say that you don't have enough iron in your system, what do they mean? Like Is that Iron part of the periodic table? If so, then where?
    (4 votes)
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    • starky tree style avatar for user bubkamajumdar
      iron in our body is mostly present in the haemoglobin compound in the RBCs and around 2% of it is present as ferritin complexes that are present in all cells, but most commonly in bone marrow, liver, and spleen.
      When a doctors says that you do not have enough iron in your body most of the time he means it in the literal sense but otherwise it can also mean protein deficiency.
      Hope i was helpful to you.
      (7 votes)
  • male robot johnny style avatar for user Chuck Punk
    At , "researchers are now looking at the anti-microbial uses for silver nanoparticles"
    What is a nanoparticle?
    An atom is a partical right?, so isn't a silver atom/particle supposed to be the smallest thing of silver?
    (5 votes)
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  • male robot hal style avatar for user R3hall
    At , Hank mentions 100 million trillion dollars of gold in our hydrosphere. Wouldn't it be simpler to say 100 quintillion dollars or 1 X 10^20?
    (3 votes)
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  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Stran1939
    What is a mole
    (1 vote)
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    • area 52 yellow style avatar for user 349764043
      The mole is the unit of measurement for amount of substance in the International System of Units. A mole of a substance or a mole of particles is defined as exactly 6.02214076×10²³ particles, which may be atoms, molecules, ions, or electrons. In short, for particles 1 mol = 6.02214076×10²³.
      (3 votes)
  • spunky sam blue style avatar for user dinesh rupeneni
    How can we identify whether the product formed is soluble in water or not?
    (4 votes)
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  • leafers seedling style avatar for user Katia Marusich
    I was wondering why exactly precipitates get formed in a chemical reaction? I know certain compounds are insoluble and others are soluble, but why exactly does this happen?
    (3 votes)
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    • starky tree style avatar for user Sai
      Precipitates in a chemical reaction are formed due to the reaction between two soluble substances which results in an insoluble substance, or precipitate. This is often observed in a double displacement reaction where the ions of two ionic compounds exchange places in an aqueous solution to form two new compounds. One of these new compounds can be insoluble in water and forms a solid precipitate.


      The reason why some compounds are soluble and others are insoluble is due to the nature of the ions or molecules in the compound and their interaction with the solvent. In the case of water, a polar solvent, polar and ionic compounds tend to be soluble because the positive and negative ions in the compound are attracted to the negative and positive ends of the water molecules, respectively. This allows the compound to dissociate into individual ions or molecules that are surrounded by water molecules, making the compound soluble.


      On the other hand, nonpolar compounds are generally not soluble in water because they do not have positive and negative ends that can interact with the water molecules. Instead, they tend to stick together and do not dissociate into individual molecules or ions in water, making them insoluble.


      In the case of a precipitate forming, the ions of the two reacting compounds are rearranging to form a new compound that is nonpolar or less polar, and therefore less soluble in water. This causes the new compound to come out of solution and form a solid precipitate.
      (1 vote)
  • blobby green style avatar for user Pradeep Kumar
    how can we predict from the reactants that the products in a reaction are going to be in a solid or aqueous state? how is the state of matter in these reactions predicted?
    (3 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user ms0851000
    How can we identify which chemical reactions are the one with precipitates ?
    (3 votes)
    Default Khan Academy avatar avatar for user

Video transcript

- [Hank Green] You're at dinner with your best friend. Fine conversation, fine wine, some barbecued beef cheeks, you look outside to admire the full moon but when you glance back you realize that your friend has turned into a werewolf. Fortunately, the cutlery is made of silver and you know how to use it. Or perhaps you're in the bath one day and as you reach for the soap you notice a wart on your big toe. Well, squeeze a little silver nitrate on that big boy and you'll be ready for sandal season in no time. Shiny electrically conductive, and oh so useful, silver has been valued since ancient times and has a reputation for purity and warding off evil whether in the form of werewolves or warts. Silver was also a big driver of the settlement in the western United States, including Montana, where I live. And of course, all that silver got here because of chemistry. Specifically, it's here because of countless chemical reactions that took place over the eons called precipitation reactions. When chemicals, in a solution, react to form a solid. Precipitation reactions are what create geological deposits in the earth as well as rings around your bathtub. They're what we use to make our waste water drinkable and they've been used by folks for thousands of years to get rich, because precipitation reactions happen to be one of the best ways to produce chemicals of the highest purity. So they're not only the key to how silver was deposited in these mountains hundreds of millions years ago, they're also the key to getting that silver back out. I can do it right here on this desk and all I need to get started is this. (upbeat music) Precipitation: it's stuff falling out of other stuff. Water falling out of the sky. Solids falling out of solution. And for us here, it all comes down to a little thing called solubility. Water, as we've discussed here before, is pretty dang good at dissolving stuff. Ionic compounds, in particular. A positively charged ion and a negatively charged ion held together by their charges might form a crystal when they're dry but add a bit of water and those little polar molecules slide their way between the ions dissolving massive amounts of ionic compounds. But some ionic compounds can overcome even the dissolving power of water. And when they form through reactions and solution, they fall out as a solid precipitate. Yes, precipitate is both a noun and a verb. Get used to it. When we talk about an ionic compound that's fallen out of solution, I say precipitate to distinguish it from precipitate which is more the verby sound. And this is purely my preference because that's how my teacher said it when I was being taught. So the rich silver veins in Montana formed when water stuffed with ionic compounds ran through cracks and pillars that were limestone. Where conditions were right, silver ions in the water reacting with ionic compounds or salts, in the limestone to make insoluble silver compounds that fell out of solution. And it looks a little bit like this. It actually looks exactly like this. It's pretty cool because, you can't feel this, but it's extremely heavy because silver is a pretty heavy element. And it wasn't just the silver salts and the solution, all kinds of stuff; gold and potassium and copper salts, and most notably, sodium salts are dissolved as water rushes across the landscape. If these dissolved compounds stay in solution until they get to the ocean, they pretty much stay there forever. The water evaporates, leaving the salts behind in the ocean where over the eons, it has built up leaving the ocean super salty as we know it today. And while sodium chloride, what we call salt when not doing chemistry, is the most common salt. There are also tons of other things dissolve in the ocean, including quite a lot of gold. In fact, at today's market value, the ocean contains about one hundred million trillion dollars of gold. And that was not a stutter, a hundred million trillion. That's a hundred trillion with six more zeros after it. So you could see why it might be nice to master some precipitation reactions. There have been chemists that have driven themselves crazy trying to figure out how to economically extract gold from sea water. But thus far, none have done it. This solution here, of silver nitrate, is similar to that ion-rich water that seeped through the Montana limestone millions of years ago. And we can use it right here at this desk to recreate the ancient reactions that deposited silver and veins across our landscape. But instead of the types of salts found in limestone, we can use a very similar and substantially more familiar ionic compound, table salt. Good old NaCl. Add some drops of sodium chloride, also known as your salt water to the silver nitrate solution and there you see your precipitate. Oooo, gross. Now the question that we immediately want to ask is, what is this white stuff down here? The key to understanding what just happened here is that both of the compounds are ionic. You remember there are two kinds of ions right? Cations are positively charged, and anions are negatively charged. Just like little bar magnets, they attract so cations only react with anions to form new compounds. And don't just think there's one anion and one cation. The sodium ion and sodium chloride will have chloride ions on all four sides which in turn are surrounded by four sodiums, and this pattern repeats many many many times until we end up with the salt crystals that we dissolved in the water. But how do we know which ions are cations and which are anions? Well, sodium is positively charged so it's a cation. And we know that it's positively charged because sodium is a metal from the left side of the periodic table. And those are always cations when they're alone. Silver is also a metal and is also a cation. We know that chlorine is a gas from the right side of the periodic table so that is an anion. Now what about the nitrate? Also anion; nitrates, sulfates and phosphates are really common and they're always anions. Whenever you see an N S or P followed by a bunch of oxygens, you know you're looking at an anion. With that in mind, look at the possible products of this reaction. What we're looking for is a product that doesn't dissolve in water. So we know it's not sodium chloride. That was one of our reactants and it dissolves readily in water. Hence, the oceans. And it isn't silver nitrate, our other reactant, or sodium nitrate because, as a rule, nitrates dissolve really easily in water so we know that's dissolved. So we're left with silver chloride. Just process of elimination. This makes sense because silver also makes insoluble compounds with bromine and iodine which are in the same column of the periodic table as chlorine. Elements in the same column often behave in similar ways and you'll notice, of course, that we don't end up with, like, a huge nice chunk of pure silver here. Now it's bonded to chlorine. Kind of like table salt, silver chloride is a crystal and solid. Unlike salt, though, it's not very soluble in water. Now getting the silver out of this compound will involve another kind of reaction; a redox reaction. Which we'll talk more about next week. In the mean time, we still have to learn the language of describing this sort of reaction. Because of the neat, and somewhat unique, interactions that are involved in precipitation reactions, dissolved substances producing solids, ions, dissociating and rebonding, there are special ways to write and balance them as equations. One way is to include notations and parenthesis that tells you what state the chemicals are in. AQ meaning aqueous or insolution and S for solid meaning that it's your precipitate. This is called the molecular equation. Another way which tends to give a clearer picture of what actually happens during the reaction is to write everything out as ions. Here, you list the compounds that dissolve completely insolution as ion. Makes sense because as soon as the salts are dissolved, every ion is on its own and it doesn't really matter where it originally came from. So the left side shows silver and nitrate and sodium and chloride ions, all in one solution. And the right side shows sodium and nitrate, still as separate ions insolution with the silver chloride precipitated out as solid. Now, we don't care about the complete equation and only want to see the active precipitants we can write it in yet a third way. We just leave out the so called spectator ions; nitrate and sodium, which don't participate directly in the reaction, and end up with a net ionic equation showing just silver and chloride ions reacting to form silver chloride. This is nice and short and to the point, which is what chemists love 'cause remember some of them have terrible writing skills and have to dictate their stuff to their mom. Now as a side, remember when I first brought up the weirdness of using Ag to denote the word silver? Well, all that stems from the fact that the Latin word for silver is argentum. And the ancient were, as most people are today, obsessed with what silver represented; not just wealth but also health. Ancient and or Europeans associated silver with purity and goodness. Hippocrates, the ancient Greek doctor, wrote about silver's anti-disease properties. And there's good science behind silver's medical uses. A lot of metals are toxic to things like fungi and microbes. But, unlike say, lead, silver isn't that toxic to humans. Silver nitrate and a compound called silver sulfadiazine were used to disinfect wounds in world war one before antibiotics were discovered. Silver sulfadiazine is still used to dress burns. And researchers are now looking at the antimicrobial uses for silver nano particles. Some people even take colloidal silver, basically just silver particles in a liquid suspension, as a kind of general health booster. But there's not actually any evidence that it boosts health. It can turn you blue though. Now you want that silver even more, don't you? Now as we always do, in order to make a reaction practical, you have to go through the final step of converting the formula equation into a molar mass equation. If we wanted to get the silver out of solution, how much salt would we need? Specifically, let's say that we wanna get one troy ounce of silver. The troy ounce is part of the troy weight system which is used to weigh precious metals. It's derived from the way the Romans measured bronze and silver bars they used for currency two thousand years ago. And we are still stuck with it. But let's be a little bit modern about this; a troy ounce equals 31 point one grams. So we want 31 point one grams of silver, the molar mass of silver is 107 point eight six eight grams per mole. Do the calculation and we find that 31 point one grams equals zero point two eight eight mols of silver. From the molecular equation, we can see that in order for it to balance we'll need one mol of sodium chloride for every mol of silver. So to get zero point two eight eight mols of silver, how much sodium chloride do we need? We've made it easy for you, it's zero point two eight eight mols. So then we convert zero point two eight eight mols of sodium chloride into units of mass and grams. Sodium chlorides molar mass is 58 point four five grams per mol. Multiply 58 point four five grams per mol by zero point two eight eight and we find we need 16 point eight grams of sodium chloride to precipitate out one troy ounce of silver out of silver nitrate solution. And look at that, you get a nice pile of silver chloride in solution. Yes, it's not pure silver. Not yet. Just like real miners who dig ors out of the ground that contained just a few percent silver, we need to do some refining. In our case, there's another type of reaction necessary called a redox reaction. Redox is short for reduction-oxidation and that is what we'll be talking about next time.