Chemistry Practical Experiments Class 12 – Complete Lab Manual CBSE

Complete Chemistry practical guide for Class 12 CBSE board exams. Includes procedures, observations, precautions, and viva questions for all experiments in the CBSE syllabus.

List of Experiments (CBSE Class 12)

CategoryExperimentsMarks
Volumetric AnalysisAcid-base, Iodometric titrations8
Salt AnalysisCation & Anion identification8
Content-basedPreparation, Tests6
Project + VivaInvestigatory project8

Volumetric Analysis

Experiment 1: Oxalic Acid vs KMnO4 Titration

Aim

To determine the strength of a given solution of oxalic acid by titrating it against standard KMnO4 solution.

Apparatus

Burette, pipette (20 ml), conical flask, burette stand, white tile.

Chemicals

Oxalic acid solution (given), standard KMnO4, dilute H2SO4.

Theory

Reaction: 2KMnO4 + 5H2C2O4 + 3H2SO4 → K2SO4 + 2MnSO4 + 10CO2 + 8H2O

Molarity equation: M1V1/n1 = M2V2/n2

n-factor: KMnO4 = 5, Oxalic acid = 2

Procedure

  1. Rinse the burette with KMnO4 and fill it
  2. Pipette out 20 ml of oxalic acid in a conical flask
  3. Add 10 ml of dilute H2SO4
  4. Heat the solution to 60-70°C
  5. Titrate with KMnO4 until permanent light pink color appears
  6. Repeat for concordant readings

Observation Table

S.NoInitial ReadingFinal ReadingVolume of KMnO4
10.0 ml15.5 ml15.5 ml
20.0 ml15.4 ml15.4 ml
30.0 ml15.5 ml15.5 ml

Concordant volume = 15.5 ml

Precautions

  1. Heat oxalic acid before titration
  2. Do not use indicator – KMnO4 is self-indicator
  3. Add KMnO4 slowly dropwise
  4. Titrate while solution is hot

Experiment 2: Mohr Salt vs KMnO4

Aim

To determine the percentage of iron in Mohr salt using KMnO4.

Reaction

10FeSO4 + 2KMnO4 + 8H2SO4 → 5Fe2(SO4)3 + K2SO4 + 2MnSO4 + 8H2O

Salt Analysis

Cation Analysis – Group Tests

GroupReagentCationsObservation
IDil. HClPb2+White ppt
IIH2S + dil HClCu2+, Pb2+Black ppt (Cu), Yellow ppt (As)
IIINH4Cl + NH4OHFe3+, Al3+Reddish brown (Fe), White (Al)
IVH2S + NH4OHZn2+, Mn2+, Co2+, Ni2+White (Zn), Flesh colored (Mn)
V(NH4)2CO3Ba2+, Ca2+, Sr2+White ppt
VINo group reagentMg2+, Na+, K+, NH4+Identified by specific tests

Anion Analysis

AnionTestObservation
CO3²⁻Dil. HClEffervescence, gas turns lime water milky
SO4²⁻BaCl2 solutionWhite ppt insoluble in conc. HCl
Cl⁻AgNO3White ppt soluble in NH4OH
NO3⁻Ring test (FeSO4 + conc. H2SO4)Brown ring at junction
S²⁻Lead acetate paperBlack stain
CH3COO⁻Heat with H2SO4Vinegar-like smell

Sample Salt Analysis

Salt Given: FeSO4.7H2O (Ferrous Sulphate)

Physical Examination

  • Color: Bluish green
  • Smell: Odorless
  • Solubility: Soluble in water

Dry Tests

  • Heating: Loses water, turns white then brown
  • Flame test: No characteristic color

Wet Tests for Cation (Fe²⁺)

  • NaOH: Dirty green precipitate turning brown
  • NH4OH: Dirty green ppt
  • K4[Fe(CN)6]: Blue precipitate (Turnbulls blue)

Wet Tests for Anion (SO4²⁻)

  • BaCl2: White precipitate insoluble in conc. HCl
  • Lead acetate: White precipitate

Content-Based Experiments

Experiment: Tests for Carbohydrates

TestReagentGlucoseSucroseStarch
Molischsα-naphthol + H2SO4Violet ringViolet ringViolet ring
FehlingsFehlings A + BRed pptNo reactionNo reaction
BenedictsBenedicts reagentRed/green pptNo reactionNo reaction
TollensAmmoniacal AgNO3Silver mirrorNo reactionNo reaction
IodineI2 solutionNo changeNo changeBlue color

Experiment: Tests for Proteins

  • Biuret Test: Violet color with NaOH + CuSO4
  • Xanthoproteic: Yellow color with conc. HNO3
  • Ninhydrin: Purple color

Experiment: Tests for Fats and Oils

  • Translucent spot test: Permanent oily spot on paper
  • Acrolein test: Pungent smell with KHSO4

Practical Exam Tips

  1. Practice titrations multiple times
  2. Memorize confirmatory tests for all ions
  3. Write observations clearly in table format
  4. Show all calculations step by step
  5. Prepare viva questions in advance
  6. Maintain clean apparatus

Common Viva Questions

  1. Why is H2SO4 added in permanganometry?
  2. What is the role of KMnO4 as self-indicator?
  3. Why is the solution heated before titration?
  4. Differentiate between true solution and colloidal solution
  5. What is the principle of paper chromatography?

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Important Class 12 Chemistry Practicals: Detailed Procedures

Practical 1: Salt Analysis (Qualitative Analysis)

Salt analysis involves identifying the cation and anion in an unknown inorganic salt. This is one of the most important practicals in Class 12 Chemistry.

Preliminary Tests:

  • Colour: Cu2+ = blue/green; Fe3+ = yellow/brown; Fe2+ = light green; Mn2+ = light pink; Co2+ = pink; Ni2+ = green
  • Smell: Ammonical (NH4+ ions), rotten egg (S2- ions), vinegar (CH3COO- ions)
  • Solubility: Test in water, dilute HCl, and dilute H2SO4

Confirmatory Tests for Common Anions:

  • CO3 2-: Add dilute H2SO4 — CO2 gas turns lime water milky
  • SO4 2-: Add BaCl2 solution — white precipitate (BaSO4) insoluble in HCl
  • Cl-: Add AgNO3 solution — white curdy precipitate (AgCl) soluble in NH4OH
  • NO3-: Brown ring test — FeSO4 + conc. H2SO4 — brown ring at the interface

Practical 2: Preparation of an Organic Compound — Aspirin (Acetylsalicylic Acid)

  • Principle: Salicylic acid reacts with acetic anhydride in the presence of phosphoric acid to form aspirin
  • Procedure: Take 2g salicylic acid in a flask. Add 3mL acetic anhydride and 5 drops phosphoric acid. Heat on a water bath for 15 minutes. Pour into cold water. Filter and recrystallise.
  • Characterisation: Melting point of pure aspirin = 135°C. Lower melting point indicates impurity.

Practical 3: Chromatography (Paper Chromatography)

  • Principle: Components of a mixture travel at different rates through a stationary phase (filter paper) using a mobile phase (solvent) — based on their polarity and adsorption.
  • Rf value: Rf = Distance travelled by component / Distance travelled by solvent front. Each substance has a characteristic Rf value in a given solvent.
  • Application: Separate components of food dyes, ink, or plant pigments (chlorophyll separates into yellow, green, and orange-red bands).

Practical Exam Tips for Class 12 Chemistry (CBSE)

  • Salt analysis viva questions are based on your observations — always record them accurately in your notebook
  • Learn the colour of precipitates and gases — questions like “What is the colour of AgCl precipitate?” are common viva questions
  • Show all safety precautions when writing procedures in your answer sheet — it adds to your marks
  • Practise the steps at home using flowcharts — the identification process must be systematic, not random
  • The internal assessment (30 marks) includes practicals (20 marks) + viva (5 marks) + project (5 marks)

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