Chemistry, asked by Gullu07, 5 hours ago

Q4. (a) You are given two beakers A and B half filled with water. When the
water in the beakers is tested with soap, they do not give lather with soap. It is
therefore inferred that water in both the beakers is hard water. Now water in
both the beakers is boiled, and after some time again tested with soap, the one
in A gives lather but in B hardness still persist.

1. What type of hardness is present in A. Name the type of salt (2 salts)
responsible for the hardness?
2. What type of hardness is present in B. Name the type of salt (2 salts)
responsible for the hardness?

Answers

Answered by pbviveka121
0

Answer:

Hard water:When hard water is treated with soap solution, it forms a white curdy precipitate known as scum. When soap is added to hard water, the Ca+2 and Mg+2 ions present in hard water react with soap. Soaps contain the sodium salts which are converted to their respective calcium and magnesium salts which are precipitated as scum. When the scum dries on washed clothes it makes them stiff and uncomfortable. So, hard water does not form lather with soap.

B. Soft water: The main reason for hardness in water is the presence of Ca+2 and Mg+2 ions. Soft water is a term for water which does not have dissolved calcium and magnesium. As soft water has few calcium ions, there is a lathering action of soaps and no scum is formed in normal washing. Moreover, soft water produces no calcium deposition in water heating systems.

C. Contaminated water: Water is said to be contaminated when it contains microorganisms like bacteria that get in the water from human or animal excreta. It can contain chemicals from industrial waste. Fertilizers contain nitrates which can enter the water with runoff from the land. It has no relation with the hardness of water.

Hard water does not lather with soap.

Explanation:

Question

Answers

Related Questions

__________ water does not lather with soap.

A. Hard water

B. Soft water

C. Contaminated water

D. None of the above

Answer

VerifiedVerified

116.4k+ views

14.0k+ likes

Hint: Lather with soaps means the ability to form foam when soap dissolves in water. Water has several types depending on the type of minerals it contains. The concentration of certain minerals creates the ‘hardness’ of water. These certain minerals are salts of calcium and magnesium as bicarbonates, chlorides, and sulphates.

Complete answer:

Let us discuss this question option-wise to find the correct answer:

A. Hard water:When hard water is treated with soap solution, it forms a white curdy precipitate known as scum. When soap is added to hard water, the Ca+2 and Mg+2 ions present in hard water react with soap. Soaps contain the sodium salts which are converted to their respective calcium and magnesium salts which are precipitated as scum. When the scum dries on washed clothes it makes them stiff and uncomfortable. So, hard water does not form lather with soap.

B. Soft water: The main reason for hardness in water is the presence of Ca+2 and Mg+2 ions. Soft water is a term for water which does not have dissolved calcium and magnesium. As soft water has few calcium ions, there is a lathering action of soaps and no scum is formed in normal washing. Moreover, soft water produces no calcium deposition in water heating systems.

C. Contaminated water: Water is said to be contaminated when it contains microorganisms like bacteria that get in the water from human or animal excreta. It can contain chemicals from industrial waste. Fertilizers contain nitrates which can enter the water with runoff from the land. It has no relation with the hardness of water.

Hard water does not lather with soap.

So option ‘a’ is the correct answer.

Additional Information:

Hard water can is not good for daily use:

(1) Hard water contributes to dry skin and hair. Washing your hair frequently with hard water will leave your scalp feeling itchy.

(2) Hard water also changes the pH balance of your skin, weakening it as a barrier against infections. People with eczema are more vulnerable.

Answered by himel30uddin
0

Answer:

1) CaCO3, MgCO3. 2) CaSO4, MgSO4

Explanation:

Beaker A has temporary hardness and beaker B has permanent hardness. Carbonate salts of beaker A breaks into soluble metal oxides after heating but sulphate salts does not decompose after heating.

Similar questions