Titration Flashcards

1
Q

The strategy: Neutralize the acid

A
  • We can use base to neutralize an acid, as we know the concentration and volume of the base
  • If we know the amount of base required to react completely with acid, then we can use mol ratios to to find the amount of acid
  • We want to completely react the acid with the base, nothing left over
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1
Q

Goal for titration

A
  • We have a flask that has a known volume
  • however, the concentration of this acid or base is unknown
  • out goal is to figure out this conecntration
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2
Q

Adding enough base

A
  • As we add our base, we stop when the pH will be 7 as the acid is all gone (neutral)
  • The acidity decreases when we add a base
  • Only for strong acid and strong base reactions
  • This is the equivalence point
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3
Q

Reaching the equivalence point

A
  • Can be done through pH probe, but very expensive
  • Acid-Base indicators can be used to change the colour of the solution at the equivalence point
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4
Q

Acid-Base Indicators

A
  • They do not change colour at a specific pH value; they change colour over a range
  • The ideal acid-base indicator changes colour at the steepest part of the titration graph (at the same volume)
  • It does not matter which indicator you use because they are on the steepest part of the graph and the volume you added stays the same
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5
Q

Three types of Acid-Base Indicators

A
  • methyl red
  • bromothymol blue
  • phlenlophien
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6
Q

Titration

A

using equvilance point and stichmetery to find the concentration of analyte

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7
Q

Titrant

A

The known concentration of the solution/Standard solution

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8
Q

Analyte

A

The Unknown concentration of the solution/Sample

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9
Q

equivlance point

A

When moles of acid and moles of base are equal to each other, they neutralize

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10
Q

Endpoint

A

The point in a titration when there’s a sudden change in color from the acid-base indicator

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11
Q

Equivalence point vs. Endpoint

A
  • Endpoint is an estimate of the equivalence point
  • Multiple trials of titration is recommended to find that average endpoint
  • You need the correct pH indicator to based on equivalence point
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12
Q

Practical details

A
  • The titrant in the burette does not need to be at 0
  • The meniscus line must touch the line
  • We subtract the initial volume to the final volume that reached the endpoint
  • We know we reached the endpoint when a single drop of titrant creates a colour change and doesn’t fade
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13
Q

Titrations and standard solutions

A
  • To make the titrant accurate, the concentration of the titrant must be precisely known
  • This is why standard solutions are used as the titrant
  • Standard solutions can be hard to prepare (if a pure solid form of the compound is hard to obtain) and potentially unstable
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14
Q

Titrations and NaOH

A
  • NaOH can react with CO2 in the air to form carbonate compounds
  • These decreases the concentration of NaOH in the solution
  • The concentration of the titrant/standard solution can be confirmed using a primary standard as analyte before titration
  • We tritrant the NaOH to see if it’s the same concentration, if not we need to make a new solution
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15
Q

Standardizing the standard

A
  • Primary standard: A compound that is highly pure and chemically stable
  • It can be used to prepare an analyte with a precise concentration
  • Standraize Bases: Use KHP
  • standraize acids: Use Na2CO3
  • Since we know the moles of the analyte (via C and V) when using primary standards, the mols of the titrant are also known (via chemical equation)
  • Using this we can find the concentration of titrant