Discussion :: Chemistry
- Aqua regia is a 1 : 3 mixture, by volume, of
A.
Conc. nitric acid and conc. hydrochloric acid |
B.
Conc. hydrochloric acid and conc. nitric acid |
C.
Conc. nitric acid and conc. sulphuric acid |
D.
Conc. sulphuric acid and conc. nitric acid |
Answer : Option A
Explanation :
Aqua regia or nitro-hydrochloric acid is a highly corrosive mixture of acids, a fuming yellow or red solution. The mixture is formed by freshly mixing concentrated nitric acid and hydrochloric acid, usually in a volume ratio of 1:3. It was named so because it can dissolve the so-called royal or noble metals, gold and platinum. However, titanium, iridium, ruthenium, tantalum, osmium, rhodium and a few other metals are capable of withstanding its corrosive properties. Aqua regia is also used in etching and in specific analytic procedures. It is also used in some laboratories to clean glassware of organic compounds and metal particles. This method is preferred over the “traditional” chromic acid bath for cleaning NMR tubes, because no traces of paramagnetic chromium can remain to later spoil acquired spectra.
Be The First To Comment