One of my favourite qualitative organic chemical reactions is the test for aldehyde functional group. Since I first did it when I was about 16 years old I was transfixed and mesmerized. I've been demonstrating it to others in all sorts of glass containers small and large since then.
Equipment:
Round bottom flask, graduated cylinders, plastic pipettes, glass stirring rods, beakers, glass petri dishes, electronic balance, rubber stopper, wash bottle filled with distilled water
Chemicals:
Concentrated nitric acid, HNO3 (16 M)



Acetone (CH3)2CO


Concentrated Ammonia solution (15 M)



Glucose solution, C6H12O6 (0.5 M)
Silver nitrate solution, AgNO3 (0.1 M)



Potassium hydroxide solution, KOH (0.8 M)


Warning:
After the demonstration, the silver residues and remaining solution MUST be disposed of with plenty of water immediately after silvering the flask. A highly unstable primary or contact explosive, fulminating silver, may form as small black crystals if the solution is left to stand for some time. Please see section below WASTE DISPOSAL.
Procedure:
Cleaning Procedure:
Firstly, we need to thoroughly clean the RBF otherwise the silver metal won't 'stick' to the inside glass wall. To accomplish this wash the flask with soap, rinse with dist. water and drain. Add about 10 mL of concentrated (conc.) HNO3 into the flask place a rubber stopper firmly and shake for a few minutes covering all the inner walls. Pour the nitric acid in a 1 L beaker containing baking soda dissolved in water to neutralise the acid. Rinse with distilled water. Then add acetone about the same volume, 10 mL and swirl for a few minutes. Pour the acetone out. The flask is now clean and ready to be silvered!
The test itself is very straight forward. First, we make the Tollen's reagent or ammoniacal silver nitrate solution by adding conc. ammonia dropwise to 250 mL of 0.1 M silver nitrate solution until a brown precipitate first forms and then re-dissolves to give a clear, colourless solution. The solution contains now the colourless complex ion [Ag(NH3)2]+
The pH is raised again by addition of 150 mL 0.8 M potassium hydroxide solution. A dark brown almost black precipitate of silver(I) oxide forms straight away which re-dissolves with further addition of conc. ammonia drop by drop to give a clear, colourless solution.
Now that we have prepared the Tollen's reagent we need an aldehyde source to test, in this case a soluble reducing sugar (glucose). The 100 mL 0.5 M glucose solution (freshly made) is poured in a 2 L round bottom flask together with the Tollen's reagent, a stopper is firmly placed and the flask swirled around to make sure the whole of the inner surface of the flask is wetted. The solution turns black at first but with further swirling a mirror surface starts to appear.
NOTE: To avoid a lot of swirling around keep the flask warm by adding hot water from a kettle a few minutes before performing the reaction. Once the Tollen's reagent is ready pour the hot water down the sink. The reaction should take place much faster now.
Waste Disposal:
It has come to my attention that simply washing off the products down the sink with excess water is NOT proper or standard procedure (harmful to bacteria and marine/aquatic life). Any unreacted silver solution can be recovered by adding conc. HCl to form silver chloride ppt. and the salt recovered by gravity filtration. Also, an excess of glucose solution will guarantee that all the silver solution was reduced to silver metal. Furthermore, I always recycle the silver metal inside the flasks by adding 50 mL of 1 M nitric acid. The silver nitrated can now be recovered from the acid solution by evaporation and the flask can then be reused.
Explanation:
Reactions:
Formation of Tollens’ Reagent:
2 AgNO3(aq) + 2 KOH(aq) → Ag2O(s) + H2O(l) + 2 KNO3(aq)
Ag2O(s) + 4 NH3(aq) + H2O(l) → 2 [Ag(NH3)2]OH(aq) (Tollens’ reagent)
Reduction of Tollens’ Reagent:
R-CHO(aq) + 2 Ag(NH3)2OH(aq) → R-COONH4(aq) + 2 Ag(s) + 3 NH3(g) + H2O(l)
(reducing sugar)
The process is called electroless plating because no electricity is employed. The aldehyde group is a weak reducing agent which reduces the complex silver ion to silver metal and gets deposited on the inside wall of the flask. A 2 µm (micrometers) silver metal layer sticks to the glass. The aldehyde group in glucose oxidises to carboxylate ion, that is gluconate. In contrast, a ketone such as propanone (acetone) does not react.
Justus von Liebig is regarded to be the first person to use the silvering process or electroless process in 1835. This process is still used today to manufacture mirrors and Christmas baubles and other ornaments.
Pictures:
The video showing the procedure:
Here is also a microscale version with reduced concentrations and amounts of chemicals and less risk: