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Chemistry · 12.4 Melting & boiling points · Paper 5/6

Heating & Cooling Curves. Test the purity.

Heat or cool a substance and follow temperature against time. A pure substance changes state at a sharp, constant temperature (a flat plateau); an impure one melts lower and over a range. Use this to assess purity.

0620 Topic 12.4 — Purity by mp/bp heating & cooling curves Paper 5/6 — Practical
Setup — pick a substance and impurity, then heat or cool it.
20 °C
state solid

Variables

0%

Live readouts

Temperature
20 °C
State
solid
Melting point
80 °C
Purity verdict
During a change of state the temperature stays constant — the energy breaks the forces between particles, not raising the temperature.

Temperature vs time

📋 Method & ideas
  1. Put the crushed solid and a thermometer in a tube; stand it in a water bath for even heating.
  2. Heat gently and record the temperature every 30 s while stirring.
  3. Plot temperature against time. The flat region (plateau) is the melting point.
  4. A pure substance gives a sharp, flat plateau at the exact melting point.
  5. An impurity lowers the melting point and makes it melt over a range (a sloping plateau).
⚠ Precautions
  • Use a water bath (not a direct flame) for even heating and safety with flammable organics.
  • Stir continuously and keep the thermometer bulb in the substance, not touching the glass.
  • Measuring melting/boiling point is a quick test for purity and identity.
🎯 Syllabus reference (0620)
  • 12.4 Separation & purification — identify substances and assess their purity using melting point and boiling point information; pure substances have sharp, fixed melting and boiling points.

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