The disulphuric acid solvent system. Part II. Cryoscopic and conductimetric measurements on some organic and inorganic bases
- 1 January 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) in J. Chem. Soc. A
- p. 1933-1940
- https://doi.org/10.1039/j19680001933
Abstract
Cryoscopic and conductimetric measurements on a number of weak organic bases have shown that they are more extensively ionized in disulphuric acid than in sulphuric acid or fluorosulphuric acid. It is concluded that disulphuric acid is a more acidic medium than either of these other solvents. It is shown how the cryoscopic data for any solute may be interpreted to give a value for ν, the total number of moles of all species except sulphuric acid, formed in solution by one mole of a solute, and also a value for the number of moles of sulphuric acid. The conductimetric data may be interpreted to give the number of moles of HS3O10 – and H2SO4 formed by each mole of solute. The results of the conductimetric and cryoscopic measurements show that HClO4 behaves as a very weak base and that KCl and KF give quantitative formation of HSO3Cl and HSO3F respectively, both of which behave as nonelectrolytes. KlO3 forms lO2SO4H and KH2PO4 gives the P(OH)4 + ion. Nitric acid gives the nitronium ion, and triphenylmethanol the triphenylcarbonium ion. A number of carboxylic acids, are shown to be dehydrated to the corresponding acyl ion, e.g., CH3CO2H→CH3CO+.Keywords
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