Conductivity


Purpose:

  1. To determine which materials/solutions conduct electricity and why.
Materials:

  1. 5% NaCl solution
  2. Solid NaCl
  3. 5% sucrose (C12H22O11) solution
  4. Ethanol (C2H5OH)
  5. Kerosene
  6. 1M HCl
  7. 1M NaOH
  8. Glacial acetic acid (HC2H3O2)
  9. 6M acetic acid (HC2H3O2)
  10. 6M ammonia (NH3)
  11. Distilled water
  12. Tap water
  13. Conductivity apparatus
  14. 100-mL beaker

Procedure:

  1. Clean and dry beaker.
  2. Add 20 mL of 5% NaCl solution to the beaker.
  3. Plug in conductivity apparatus and immerse the electrodes into the solution at a depth of 1 cm.
  4. Make observations about the light bulb.
  5. UNPLUG the conductivity apparatus, and clean and dry electrodes.
  6. Repeat steps 1-5 with all other solutions.
  7. Record all information in the data table.

Data & Information:

SubstanceBright/Dim/No Light. . . . . . . . . . . Why? . . . . . . . . . . .
5% NaCl SolutionBright/Dim/No LightWhy:
Distilled WaterBright/Dim/No LightWhy:
Tap WaterBright/Dim/No LightWhy:
KeroseneBright/Dim/No LightWhy:
1M HClBright/Dim/No LightWhy:
1M NaOHBright/Dim/No LightWhy:
Glacial HC2H3O2Bright/Dim/No LightWhy:
6M NH4Bright/Dim/No LightWhy:
1M NH4Bright/Dim/No LightWhy:

Questions:

  1. Compare the conductivity of solid NaCl and a 5% solution of NaCl. Explain the difference.




  2. Compare the conductivity of 6M ammonia and 1M ammonia. Explain any difference.




  3. What type of bonding is present in HCl? Explain the results of the conductivity test on HCl.




  4. Glacial acid is acetic acid that is 99.8%, containing no more than 0.2% water. Compare the conductivity of glacial acid with that of 6M acetic acid and explain the difference.








Table of Contents
(Experiments)
PREVIOUS Experiment:
(Magnesium Burns In Steam)
NEXT Experiment:
(Acid-Base Titration)
DOWNLOAD or PLAY
the VIDEO files for
this experiment.