← Back to Lab
Chemistry · 12.4 Separation & purification · Paper 5/6

Separation & Purification. Pick the method.

Four core techniques: filtration, crystallisation, simple distillation and fractional distillation. See the apparatus, what each one separates, and choose the right method for a given mixture.

0620 Topic 12.4 — Separation filter · crystallise · distil Paper 5/6 — Practical
Setup — choose a technique, then run it.

This technique

Separates
Based on
Example

Which method? — match the mixture

📋 The four techniques
  • Filtration — separates an insoluble solid from a liquid. The solid stays on the filter paper (residue); the liquid passes through (filtrate).
  • Crystallisation — obtains a soluble solid from its solution. Evaporate to the point of crystallisation, then cool slowly so crystals grow.
  • Simple distillation — separates a solvent from a solution (e.g. pure water from salt water). The liquid boils, the vapour condenses in the Liebig condenser.
  • Fractional distillation — separates miscible liquids with different boiling points (e.g. ethanol from water) using a fractionating column.
⚠ Key points & precautions
  • In distillation, the thermometer bulb sits at the side-arm to read the vapour temperature.
  • Cooling water enters the condenser at the bottom (counter-current) for efficient condensing.
  • Crystallise — do not evaporate to dryness, or you spoil the crystals.
  • The fractionating column gives repeated evaporation/condensation so the more volatile liquid reaches the top first.
🎯 Syllabus reference (0620)
  • 12.4 Separation & purification — describe and explain filtration, crystallisation, simple and fractional distillation, and choosing the right technique; identify residue and filtrate.

Ask the lab assistant