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What is the role of a drying and ignition step in gravimetric analysis?

Here’s a explanation of the role of drying and ignition in gravimetric analysis:


1. Drying

  • After filtration, the precipitate still contains water and impurities.
  • Drying removes this moisture by heating it at a moderate temperature (usually in an oven).
  • The goal is to make the precipitate completely dry so that its weight is accurate and constant.

Why it’s important:

  • Water left in the solid would make it heavier and give false results.
  • Drying ensures that the mass measured is only of the compound, not of water.

2. Ignition

  • Sometimes drying is not enough. The precipitate is then heated strongly (ignited) in a furnace.
  • Ignition helps to:
    • Remove all moisture and volatile materials.
    • Convert the precipitate into a stable, known compound that won’t change on standing (for example, hydroxides to oxides).

Example:

  • Calcium oxalate (CaC₂O₄) is ignited to form calcium oxide (CaO) before weighing.

In short:

  • Drying removes water.
  • Ignition removes all volatile substances and forms a stable compound for accurate weighing.

Purpose: To make sure the final solid is pure, stable, and has a constant weight for precise results.

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