In 1775, Carl Wilhelm Scheele treated arsenic trioxide with nitric acid and zinc which resulted in arsine gas (AsH3), zinc nitrate and water:
In 1787, Johann Metzger used a carbon reduction method to produce carbon dioxide gas and solid arsenic from arsenic trioxide and carbon:
In 1785, Samuel Hahnemann produced a bright yellow precipitate of arsenic trisulfide, As2S3, by passing a stream of hydrogen sulfide gas, H2S, through an acidified arsenic solution.
In 1836, James Marsh designed an apparatus that would detect and measure arsenic.
The sample is placed in a flask with arsenic-free zinc and sulfuric acid.
Arsine gas forms:
As2O3 + 6 Zn + 6 H2SO4 → 2 AsH3 + 6 ZnSO4 + 3 H2O
The arsine gas is fed through a drying tube to a glass tube which is heated.Arsine deomposes on heating, forming elemental arsenic which is a shiny black substance:
2 AsH3 → 3 H2 + 2 As
By placing a cold surface at the end of the heated tube it is possible to condense this arsenic, which forms a black "mirror".Today, these "wet" methods of chemical detection have been superceded by instrumental analysis. e Atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS) can now be used to determine not only the presence of arsenic, but also how much arsenic is present.
Further Reading:
Solubility Rules
Writing Precipitation Equations
Gravimetric Analysis
AAS
Oxidation and Reduction
Carbon Reduction Methods
Suggested Study Questions:
- Give the oxidation state (number) for arsenic in each of the following:
- As2O3
- As4S4
- AsH3
- As
- For the reaction: As4S4 + 7O2 → 2As2O3 + 4SO2 which element, or elements, have been oxidized?
- Consider the reaction: 2 As2O3 + 3 C → 3 CO2 + 4 As
Is arsenic likely to be more or less active than carbon? - Write a possible net ionic equation for the reaction in which arsenic ions react with hydrogen sulfide gas to produce a precipitate of arsenic trisulfide.
- Consider the reaction: 2 AsH3 → 3 H2 + 2 As which results in the formation of a shiny black "mirror" of arsenic.
- Has arsenic been oxidized or reduced?
- Has hydrogen been oxidized or reduced?
- If 1 mole of arsine gas decomposes completely, how many moles of hydrogen gas would be produced?
- At 0oC and 100 kPa, what volume of gas would be produced by the thermal decomposition of 25 moles of arsine?
- At 0oC and 100 kPa, what mass of arsenic would be deposited after the thermal decomposition of 150 mg of arsine.
- At 25oC and 100 kPa, what mass of arsine will decompose to produce 0.05 L of hydrogen gas?
- A sample of gas containing arsine produces an "arsenic mirror" containing 0.02 g of arsenic. What mass of arsine was present in the gas sample?
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