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Paper Chromatography
Summary
This experiment shows how ink can be separated into
its component dyes by chromatography. This is an illustration of an
important technique used in all chemical sciences.
Materials
Coffee filter (use a brand which is fairly thick, such
as the Molinex or the Kafilta cone filter), plastic cups, water, rubbing
alcohol, one each of several brands of black felt tip pen or marker (use
no more than one brand of "permanent" marker, the rest should be the
non-permanent type)
Procedure
- Put a small amount of water in a plastic cup, so
as to barely cover the bottom of the cup.
- Assign a number to each pen.
- Cut the coffee filter into long strips (about 3 -
4 cm wide and 10 cm long). Cut it in such a way that the grain of
the filter paper runs parallel to the 10 cm dimension of the strip.
Fold each strip along the 10 cm dimension so as to make a crease
along the middle of the strip. Identify each strip near one end of
the filter paper along the 10 cm dimension. For convenience, this
end will be called the top of the paper. Use the same numbering
system as used with the pens.
- Take a black pen and a strip. The two should have
the same identification number. Make two small marks with the pen
about 2 cm from the bottom of the strip, one on each side of the
crease. (It is important to keep the size of the marks small).
Repeat with another pen and another numbered strip until all the
different pens have been used.
- Take a marked strip and stand it in the cup so
that the bottom of the strip is touching the water. Make sure that
the pen mark stays above the water level.
- Observe the separation of the ink into different
colors as water rises up the coffee filter. Remove the paper from
the cup when the water (not the colors) has risen to about 2 - 3 cm
from the top.
- Repeat the above with all the marked strips.
Observe the color patterns produced with different pens.
- Repeat the above using rubbing alcohol in the cup
instead of water. Compare the color patterns produced in this case
with those produced with the corresponding pens using water.
Tips:
- Coffee filter is recommended for this experiment
because it is cheap and can be purchased easily. The experiment
works even better with filter paper or chromatography paper, but
these are more expensive. Black pens are recommended because they
usually have many different dyes in their ink. Students should be
encouraged to try markers of different colors or food coloring (the
green food coloring works well). Do not be disappointed if the
marker does not produce a dramatic separation pattern.
- Water rises up the coffee filter because of a
phenomenon called capillary action. It is the same action which a
tree uses to soak water up its trunk and its branches. After all,
coffee filter is made from trees! One can mimic a tree using a thick
paper towel and rolling it as a trunk.
- The role of the water and the rubbing alcohol in
this experiment is that of a carrying liquid, because these liquids
carry the ink up the coffee filter. The technical term for this is
an eluant.
- Students are expected to make the following
observations:
- marks made from the same pen always produce
the same separation pattern, i.e., the different colors are in
the same order after the separation. The size of the original
dot on the paper has no effect on the separation pattern,
although the separation is better defined if the dot is smaller.
- different brands of pen produce different
separation patterns.
- different carrying liquids produce different
separation patterns with the same pen.
- Students should be shown that different pens from
the same batch (same brand and same model) produce the same
separation pattern.
- The separation patterns produced by different
brands of pen and different carrying liquids are governed by several
factors:
- The composition of the ink. Different
companies use different dyes to make their ink. Some are doing
it to produce special physical or visual effects, some are doing
it so they cannot be accused of copying other people’s product.
- The solubility of each component dye in
the carrying liquid. If the dye is not soluble in the
carrying liquid, it cannot be carried up the paper. This is the
case of the permanent ink with water as the carrying liquid.
Since the permanent ink is not soluble in water (hence the term
:"permanent"), the mark stays in the starting place. Since most
permanent ink are soluble somewhat in organic solvents, one can
get it to produce a pattern using rubbing alcohol as the
carrying liquid.
Typically, the most soluble dye will move up
the paper the most and the least soluble dye will move up the
least. If a dye is very soluble in the carrying liquid, it will
follow the top of the water level up the paper closely. Try the
experiment with a washable marker.
- The extent to which the ink clings to the
paper. A dye which is strongly attached to the paper will
not move up the paper much.
- The length of the paper. The
separation of the different dyes along the paper increases if
the carrying liquid is allowed to carry the ink up a longer
distance. At the beginning of the experiment, the colors are
still bundled together. As the carrying liquid moves up the
paper, the separation becomes more and more complete. Note,
however, that the order of the colors does not change with the
distance traveled.
- The teacher can take one of the markers which the
students have used and use it to put a mark on a coffee filter. Give
this to the students as an unknown and ask the students to identify
which marker was used to make the mark. The students should be able
to device the following procedure:
- Take the paper with the unknown and run the
paper chromatography experiment in exactly the same way as with
the other markers.
- Observe the separation pattern produced by
the unknown, and compare it with the patterns produced by the
known markers.
- The marker which produces the same pattern as
the unknown is the origin of the unknown.
- To obtain a better confirmation, you can
perform a chromatography of the unknown and of one (or many)
known marker, simultaneously, on the same paper.
These types of approach and reasoning are very
similar to those used in a very important branch of chemistry called
analytical chemistry, which is the science of finding out the
composition of unknown substances. Chromatography is an important
tool in analytical chemistry. For example, this can be used to
identify the author of a crime.
- There are many different types of chromatography
besides the paper chromatography illustrated in this experiment.
Instead of paper, different minerals and synthetic compounds have
been used to improve the separation of different components in a
mixture. Chromatography can also be used to separate different
components in a gas mixture
- Because of its ability to separate different
components in a mixture, chromatography is also used to purify
chemicals.
References
Similar forms this experiment have been reported in
many books, for example, in Exploring Chemistry, vol 1, Canadian Society
for Chemistry (1996), Discovering Chemistry, Canadian Society for
Chemistry (1993), or in Chemical Activities, by C.L. Borgford and L.R.
Summerlin, American Chemical Society, Washington, (1988).
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