Equilibrium of Iron (III) Thiocyanate
Materials: ★★★ Requires materials not commonly found in school laboratories
Difficulty: ★★☆ Can be done by science teachers
Safety: ★★★ Only to be attempted with adequate safety procedures and trained staff
Categories: Equilibrium
Alternative titles: Ferric Thiocyanate Equilibrium
Summary
The equilibrium between iron(III) ions, thiocyanate ions, and the red-brown ferric thiocyanate complex can be shifted by adding or removing reactants. Color changes from yellow to red-brown or vice versa demonstrate Le Chatelier’s principle in action.
Procedure
- Prepare the ferric thiocyanate solution by mixing equal volumes of dilute ferric chloride solution and potassium thiocyanate solution.
- Pour a thin layer of this reddish-brown solution into a glass petri dish.
- Add a small amount of iron(III) chloride solid to one area of the dish and observe the color darkening to red-brown.
- Add potassium thiocyanate solid to another area and observe a similar red-brown darkening.
- Add potassium phosphate solid to a different area, which removes Fe³⁺ ions by precipitation, shifting the equilibrium back and causing a more yellow color.
- Add silver nitrate solid to another area, which removes SCN⁻ ions by precipitation, also shifting the equilibrium left and producing more yellow.
- Compare all four effects side by side in the same dish for a striking visual display.
Links
Le Chatelier's Principle - Iron (III) Thiocyanate - Chemistry and Biochemistry Demo lab at OSU:
Iron(III) Thiocyanate Equilibrium - Science Ready:
📄 Equilibrium of Iron (III) Thiocyanate - Harvard Natural Sciences Lecture Demonstrations: https://sciencedemonstrations.fas.harvard.edu/presentations/equilibrium-iron-iii-thiocyanate
Variations
- Warm the solution to observe temperature effects on the equilibrium position.
- Use a spectrophotometer to measure absorbance changes and determine the equilibrium constant.
- Demonstrate the reaction in a cuvette under a document camera for larger audiences.
Safety Precautions
- Wear safety glasses, gloves, and a lab coat when handling chemicals.
- Handle silver nitrate with care; it stains skin and clothing.
- Work with small amounts of solid chemicals to minimize waste and exposure.
- Dispose of all solutions and solids in an inorganic chemical waste container.
Questions to Consider
- Why does adding FeCl₃ or KSCN make the solution more red-brown? (Adding reactants shifts equilibrium to the right, forming more FeSCN²⁺ complex.)
- Why does adding potassium phosphate or silver nitrate make the solution more yellow? (They remove Fe³⁺ or SCN⁻, shifting equilibrium left toward reactants.)
- How does this experiment illustrate Le Chatelier’s principle? (The system responds to stresses such as added or removed species by shifting equilibrium to counteract the change.)
- How could you determine the equilibrium constant experimentally? (By measuring absorbance of FeSCN²⁺ at a known wavelength and applying Beer’s Law.)