Identifying Metal Ions (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Alexandra Brennan

Expertise

Chemistry

Identifying Metal Ions

  • The flame test is used to identify the positive metal ion (cations) by the colour of the flame they produce

    • Ions from different metals produce different colours

  • To carry out a flame test:

    • Dip the loop of an unreactive metal wire such as nichrome or platinum in dilute acid

    • Hold it in the blue flame of a Bunsen burner until there is no colour change

    • Dip the loop into the solid sample / solution and place it in the edge of the blue Bunsen flame

  • It is important to place the wire into acid first to prevent contamination 

    • Not doing this might result in two or more ions being present on the wire meaning the colours will mix 

    • One colour could mask another colour and you will not be able to identify the ion

How to carry out a flame test

The diagram shows how to perform a flame test to identify metal ions
The blue flame must be used to carry out a flame test
  • The colour of the flame is observed and used to identify the metal ion present:

Cation

Flame Colour

Li+

Crimson

Na+

Yellow

K+

Lilac

Ca2+

Red

Ba2+

Green

Flame Test Colours 

The diagram shows the crimson flame of lithium ions, yellow flame of sodium ions, lilac flame of potassium ions, red flame of calcium ions and freen flame of barium ions
Metal ions form distinctive coloured flames

You've read 0 of your 0 free revision notes

Get unlimited access

to absolutely everything:

  • Downloadable PDFs
  • Unlimited Revision Notes
  • Topic Questions
  • Past Papers
  • Model Answers
  • Videos (Maths and Science)

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Alexandra Brennan

Author: Alexandra Brennan

Alex studied Biochemistry at Newcastle University before embarking upon a career in teaching. With nearly 10 years of teaching experience, Alex has had several roles including Chemistry/Science Teacher, Head of Science and Examiner for AQA and Edexcel. Alex’s passion for creating engaging content that enables students to succeed in exams drove her to pursue a career outside of the classroom at SME.