REACTIONS INVOLVING HALOGENOALKANES AND SILVER NITRATE SOLUTION


          

This page looks at how silver nitrate solution can be used as part of a test for halogenoalkanes (haloalkanes or alkyl halides), and also as a means of measuring their relative reactivities.


          

Testing for halogenoalkanes

Silver nitrate solution can be used to find out which halogen is present in a suspected halogenoalkane. The most effective way is to do a substitution reaction which turns the halogen into a halide ion, and then to test for that ion with silver nitrate solution.

Doing the reaction

The halogenoalkane is warmed with some sodium hydroxide solution in a mixture of ethanol and water. Everything will dissolve in this mixture and so you can get a good reaction.

The halogen atom is displaced as a halide ion:


Note:  This reaction is described in more detail on the page about reactions of halogenoalkanes with hydroxide ions.

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There is no need to make this reaction go to completion. The silver nitrate test is sensitive enough to detect fairly small concentrations of halide ions.

The mixture is acidified by adding dilute nitric acid. This prevents unreacted hydroxide ions reacting with the silver ions. Then silver nitrate solution is added.

Various precipitates may be formed from the reaction between the silver and halide ions:

ion present observation
Cl- white precipitate
Br- very pale cream precipitate
I- very pale yellow precipitate

          

Confirming the precipitates

It is actually quite difficult to distinguish between these colours, especially if there isn't much precipitate. You can sort out which precipitate you have by adding ammonia solution.

original precipitate observation
AgCl precipitate dissolves to give a colourless solution
AgBr precipitate is almost unchanged using dilute ammonia solution, but dissolves in concentrated ammonia solution to give a colourless solution
AgI precipitate is insoluble in ammonia solution of any concentration


Note:  You can read more about these tests (including an explanation of this reaction involving ammonia) by following this link to the page about testing for halide ions.

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Comparing halogenoalkane reactivities

Background

In this case, various halogenoalkanes are treated with a solution of silver nitrate in a mixture of ethanol and water. Nothing else is added. After varying lengths of time precipitates appear as halide ions (produced from reactions of the halogenoalkanes) react with the silver ions present.

As long as you are doing everything under controlled conditions (same amounts of everything, same temperature and so on), the time taken gives a good guide to the reactivity of the halogenoalkanes - the quicker the precipitate appears, the more reactive the halogenoalkane.

The halide ion is formed in one of two ways, depending on the type of halogenoalkane you have present - primary, secondary or tertiary.


Note:  If you aren't sure what primary, secondary and tertiary halogenoalkanes are, you should read the beginning of the introduction to halogenoalkanes by following this link before you go on.

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For a primary halogenoalkane, the main reaction is one between the halogenoalkane and water in the solvent.

A tertiary halogenoalkane ionises to a very small extent of its own accord.

Secondary halogenoalkanes do a bit of both of these.


          

Comparing the reaction rates as you change the halogen

You would have to keep the type of halogenoalkane (primary, secondary or tertiary) constant, but vary the halogen. You might, for example, compare the times taken to produce a precipitate from this series of primary halogenoalkanes:

Obviously, the time taken for a precipitate of silver bromide to appear will depend on how much of everything you use and the temperature at which the reaction is carried out. But the pattern of results is always the same.

For example:

  • A primary iodo compound produces a precipitate quite quickly.

  • A primary bromo compound takes longer to give a precipitate.

  • A primary chloro compound probably won't give any precipitate until well after you have lost interest in the whole thing!

The order of reactivity reflects the strengths of the carbon-halogen bonds. The carbon-iodine bond is the weakest and the carbon-chlorine the strongest of the three bonds. In order for a halide ion to be produced, the carbon-halogen bond has to be broken. The weaker the bond, the easier that is.


          

Comparing the reaction rates of primary, secondary and tertiary halogenoalkanes

You would need to keep the halogen atom constant. It is common to use bromides because they have moderate reaction rates. You could, for example, compare the reactivity of these compounds:

Again, the actual times taken will vary with reaction conditions, but the pattern will always be the same.

For example:

  • The tertiary halide produces a precipitate almost instantly.

  • The secondary halide gives a slight precipitate after a few seconds. The precipitate thickens up with time.

  • The primary halide may take considerably longer to produce a precipitate.

It is more difficult to explain the reason for this, because it needs a fairly intimate knowledge of the mechanisms involved in the reactions. It reflects the change in the way that the halide ion is produced as you go from primary to secondary to tertiary halogenoalkanes.


Note:  You can read about the different mechanisms for this reaction in the mechanism section of this site if you are interested.

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