Paper Chromatography (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Alexandra Brennan

Expertise

Chemistry

Paper Chromatography

  • Chromatography is used to separate substances and provide information to help identify them

  • The components have different solubilities in a given solvent

    • E.g. Different coloured inks that have been mixed to make black ink

  • pencil line is drawn on chromatography paper and spots of the sample are placed on it

    • A pencil is used for this as ink would run into the chromatogram along with the samples

  • The paper is then lowered into the solvent container, making sure that the pencil line sits above the level of the solvent so the samples don’t wash into the solvent container

  • The solvent travels up the paper by capillary action, taking some of the coloured substances with it

  • Different substances have different solubilities so they will travel at different rates, causing the substances to spread apart

    • Those substances with higher solubility will travel further than the others

  • The solvent used is usually water but it can be other substances such as ethanol

How to carry out chromatography

The diagram shows the steps required to perform a paper chromatography experiment
The pigments in ink can be analysed using paper chromatography

Rf Values 

  • These values are used to identify the components of mixtures

  • The Rf value of a particular compound is always the same but it is dependent, however, on the solvent used

  • If the solvent is changed then the value changes

  • Calculating the Rvalue allows chemists to identify unknown substances because it can be compared with the Rvalues of known substances under the same conditions

  • The retention factor, Rf, is calculated by the equation:

Rf = fraction numerator bold distance bold space bold moved bold space bold by bold space bold substance bold space over denominator bold distance bold space bold moved bold space bold by bold space bold solvent bold space end fraction 

  • The Rf value is a ratio and therefore has no units and will be less than 1

Worked Example

A student obtained the following chromatogram when carrying out chromatography. 

Using Rf values to identify mixture components, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Calculate the Rf value of the substance. 

Answer:

  • The Rf value of the substances in the chromatogram above can be calculated by:

Rf = fraction numerator distance space moved space by space the space substance over denominator distance space moved space by space the space solvent space end fraction equals space 3 over 6 equals space 0.5

Exam Tip

When you calculate Rvalues in exams, make sure to use your ruler carefully to measure the distance moved by the solvent and the substance as mark schemes can be strict about the values accepted for these. 

Stationary & Mobile Phases

  • All chromatography techniques use two phases called the mobile phase and the stationary phase

  • In paper chromatography:

    • The mobile phase is the solvent in which the sample molecules can move

    • In paper chromatography, this is usually water or ethanol 

    • The stationary phase in paper chromatography is the actual chromatography paper itself

  • The substances which are more soluble in the solvent will travel further up the paper because they spend more time in the mobile phase and are therefore carried further up the paper than the less soluble components

Interpreting chromatograms

  • We can use a chromatogram to compare the substances present in a mixture to known substances and make assumptions

    • Pure substances will produce only one spot on the chromatogram

    • If two or more substances are the same, they will produce identical chromatograms

    • If the substance is a mixture, it will separate on the paper to show all the different components as separate spots

Example chromatogram results

The diagram shows the results of a chromatography experiment where brown ink has separated, showing a spot of red ink, blue ink and yellow ink
The brown ink has separated showing a spot of red ink, blue ink and yellow ink
  • We can draw several conclusions from this chromatogram:

    • The brown ink is a mixture as there are three dots

    • Red, yellow and blue are pure as there is only one dot for each 

    • The brown ink contains red, blue and yellow as the dots are in line with one another 

Exam Tip

Chromatograms in exams will be in black and white so to identify whether a mixture contains a known sample, the dots need to be in line with one another. 

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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.