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For quality control, a chemist analyses the vitamin C (molecular formula C6H8O6) content of a new brand of fruit juice - VCE - SSCE Chemistry - Question 2 - 2005 - Paper 1

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For quality control, a chemist analyses the vitamin C (molecular formula C6H8O6) content of a new brand of fruit juice. The reaction used is an oxidation-reduction r... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:For quality control, a chemist analyses the vitamin C (molecular formula C6H8O6) content of a new brand of fruit juice - VCE - SSCE Chemistry - Question 2 - 2005 - Paper 1

Step 1

Give the half reaction for the oxidation of vitamin C.

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Answer

The half reaction for the oxidation of vitamin C (C6H8O6) is:

C6H8O6(aq)+2H2O(l)C6H8O7(aq)+2H+(aq)+2eC6H8O6(aq) + 2H2O(l) \rightarrow C6H8O7(aq) + 2H^+(aq) + 2e^-

Step 2

Calculate the amount of I3- present in the average titre, in mole:

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Answer

To calculate the amount of I3- present in the average titre, use the molarity formula:

n=C×Vn = C \times V

where:

  • nn is the number of moles,
  • CC is the concentration in moles per litre,
  • VV is the volume in litres.

Given:

  • Concentration, C=2.00×104 MC = 2.00 \times 10^{-4} \text{ M}
  • Average titre volume, V=15.65 mL=0.01565 LV = 15.65 \text{ mL} = 0.01565 \text{ L}

Now calculate:

n=(2.00×104)×(0.01565)=3.130×106 moles of I3n = (2.00 \times 10^{-4}) \times (0.01565) = 3.130 \times 10^{-6} \text{ moles of } I3^-

Step 3

Calculate the amount of vitamin C present in each 25.00 mL aliquot, in mole:

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Answer

From the balanced equation:

C6H8O6+I3C6H8O7+3IC6H8O6 + I3^- \rightarrow C6H8O7 + 3I^-

1 mole of I3- reacts with 1 mole of vitamin C. Thus, the amount of vitamin C is the same as the amount of I3- that reacted:

  • The amount of vitamin C in each 25.00 mL aliquot is:

n(C6H8O6)=3.130×106 molesn(C6H8O6) = 3.130 \times 10^{-6} \text{ moles}

Step 4

Calculate the concentration of vitamin C in the original (undiluted) sample of fruit juice in mole per litre:

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Answer

Since the original 20.00 mL sample was diluted to 250.0 mL, we can calculate the concentration of vitamin C in the undiluted sample.

Using:

C1×V1=C2×V2C_1 \times V_1 = C_2 \times V_2

where:

  • C1C_1 is the concentration of the undiluted sample,
  • V1=20.00 mLV_1 = 20.00 \text{ mL},
  • C2C_2 is the concentration of diluted sample (the amount of vitamin C we calculated in part b ii),
  • V2=250.0 mLV_2 = 250.0 \text{ mL}.

To find C1C_1:

C1=C2×V2V1C_1 = \frac{C_2 \times V_2}{V_1}

Calculating: C2=3.130×1060.025=1.252×104MC_2 = \frac{3.130 \times 10^{-6}}{0.025} = 1.252 \times 10^{-4} M

Thus, C1=1.252×104×250.020.00=1.565×103 MC_1 = \frac{1.252 \times 10^{-4} \times 250.0}{20.00} = 1.565 \times 10^{-3} \text{ M}

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