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Question: When ammonium chloride and ammonium hydroxide are added to a solution containing both \(A{{l}^{3+}}\...

When ammonium chloride and ammonium hydroxide are added to a solution containing both Al3+A{{l}^{3+}} and Ca2+C{{a}^{2+}} ions, which ion is precipitated first and why?

Explanation

Solution

-Ammonium chloride is an inorganic compound with an NH4ClN{{H}_{4}}Cl structure and a white crystalline salt that is highly soluble in water. Ammonium chloride solutions are slightly acidic. Ammonium hydroxide, also known as ammonia powder, ammonia solution is an ammonia solution in powder. It can be denoted by NH3(aq) N{{H}_{3}}\left( aq \right)~ symbols.

Complete step by step answer:
An ion compound is precipitated from the solution when the concentration of its cation and anion reaches its solubility level.
As ammonium chloride and ammonium hydroxide are added to the solution containing Al3+A{{l}^{3+}} and Ca2+C{{a}^{2+}} ions, Al3+A{{l}^{3+}}gets first precipitated as Al(OH)3Al{{\left( OH \right)}_{3}}. The solubility product of Al(OH)3Al{{\left( OH \right)}_{3}} is way less than the solubility product of Ca(OH)2Ca{{\left( OH \right)}_{2}}. NH4ClN{{H}_{4}}Cl suppress the dissociation ofNH4OHN{{H}_{4}}OH which ends in very low hydroxide ion concentration. At such an occasional hydroxide concentration, the ionic product of Al(OH)3Al{{\left( OH \right)}_{3}} exceeds its solubility product which ends in precipitation.
Solubility is known as the maximum volume of solution that can be dissolved in an equilibrium solvent.
The constant of the solubility substance (Ksp{{K}_{sp}}) represents the relationship between a solid in a solution and its constituent ions.
Solubility equilibrium is a type of dynamic equilibrium that occurs when a solid-state chemical compound with a solution of that compound is in chemical equilibrium. The solid can dissolve unchanged, either with dissociation or with chemical reaction to another solution component, such as acid or alkaline.
In the salt analysis, NH4ClN{{H}_{4}}Cl is added in appropriate quantity before the addition of NH4OHN{{H}_{4}}OH, otherwise the higher group cations may be precipitated in group III. (Reason: NH4ClN{{H}_{4}}Cl is a solid electrolyte that decomposes completely. Although the NH4OHN{{H}_{4}}OH is a weak base, it does not ionise completely.)

Note: -Ca2+C{{a}^{2+}} ions are precipitated as CaCO3CaC{{O}_{3}} with the reagent ammonium carbonate + ammonium hydroxide + ammonium chloride.
-As ammonium chloride is added to the ammonium hydroxide solution, the activity of changing or exchanging ions takes place. The reaction is termed a double displacement reaction.