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The actual experiment can be viewed at ...pLuvia said:Have you done the experiment?
Thanks, except in the HSC there is no half-mark, either no mark or one whole mark. But now you know your mistake, I know your mistake, it hopefully won't happen again.airie said:And btw, just a general rule of thumb: wash all components of your apparatus (scratch stuff like Bunsen burner, I meant things like test tubes, flasks etc) before the experiment. I lost half a mark for not including the step in the what-to-do flowchart for this prac in the prelim yearly
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As far as I know, the colour change is only in relation to whether the solution is an alkane or an alkene. Correct me if I am wrong.Pugsley said:Can someone explain the chemistry of why the hexene actually decolorises the bromine?
I understand they react due to the double bond and halogenation occurs but does it have something to do with it being a diatomic molecule before the reaction are just the simple fact that there is alot less bromine present in each molecule?
Assistance would be greatly appreciated, thanks in advance.
This is an example of dynamic equilibrium. As Br2 is only slightly soluble in water most of it stays as Br2 - ie the position of equilibrium lies to the left.yoakim said:Would anyone care enough to answer me this question: Why is it that people use the dynamic equilibrium reaction of bromine water:
Br2 <--> HOBr + H (positive ion) + Br (negative ion)
Haha I don't understand anything what you just said.phil2010 said:This is an example of dynamic equilibrium. As Br2 is only slightly soluble in water most of it stays as Br2 - ie the position of equilibrium lies to the left.
However some of the HOBr reacts with the alkene and according to Le Chatelier as HOBr is removed from the RHS, the forward reatction increases to 'reduce the stress' (of HOBr being removed). This creats more HOBr and uses up Br2. With more HOBr available, this will now react with the alkene. This process continues until the 'equilibrium' lies completely to the RHS which results in the removal of all the brown Br2 - hence the decolourisation of bromine water.
NB - for this to "work" the alkene has to be in excess
yoakim said:Haha I don't understand anything what you just said.