Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Determination of the chloride ion concentration using silver nitrate.

Theory

A titrimetric method based on the formation of a slightly soluble precipitate is called a precipitation titration. The most important precipitation process in titrimetric analysis utilizes silver nitrate as the reagent (Argentimetric process)

Many methods are utilized in determining end points of these reactions, but the most important method, the formation of a colored precipitate will be considered here.

In the titration of a neutral solution of chloride ions with silver nitrate, a small quantity of potassium chromate solution is added to serve as the indicator. At the end point the chromate ions combine with silver ions to form the sparingly soluble brick-red silver chromate.This is a case of fractional precipitation, the two sparingly soluble salts being AgCl (Ksp = 1.2 x 10^-10) and Ag2CrO4 (Ksp = 1.7x10^-12).

AgCl is the less soluble salt and initially chloride concentration is high, hence AgCl will be precipitated. Once the chloride ions are over and with the addition of small excess of silver nitrate solution brick red color silver chromate becomes visible. The titration should be carried out in neutral solution or in very faintly alkaline solution. i.e. within the pH range 6.5-9.

In acid solutions following reaction occurs.

If you cant see the image clearly please click on it.
Consequently the chromate ions concentration is reduced and the solubility product of silver chromate may not be exceeded. In markedly alkaline solution, silver hydroxide (Ksp = 2.3 x 10^-8) might be precipitated.
Procedure
Pipette out 25.00 mL of the chloride solution into a titration flask and add 1mL of the potassium chromate solution. Titrate this solution with 0.1M silver nitrate solution.

I.    Calculate the concentration of the chloride solution
II.   Sketch the titration curve for the above titration.
III. Calculate the concentration of chloride, silver and chromate ions at the equivalence point.

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Chemical Titration as a Volumetric Analysis method in Physical Chemistry

Titration is a common laboratory method of quantitative chemical analysis that is used to determine the unknown concentration of a known reactant. Because volume measurements play a key role in titration, it is also known as volumetric analysis. A reagent, called the titrant or titrator, of a known concentration (a standard solution) and volume is used to react with a solution of the analyte or titrand, whose concentration is not known. Using a calibrated burette to add the titrant, it is possible to determine the exact amount that has been consumed when the endpoint is reached. The endpoint is the point at which the titration is complete, as determined by an indicator. This is ideally the same volume as the equivalence point—the volume of added titrant at which the number of moles of titrant is equal to the number of moles of analyte, or some multiple thereof (as in polyprotic acids). In the classic strong acid-strong base titration, the endpoint of a titration is the point at which the pH of the reactant is just about equal to 7, and often when the solution permanently changes color due to an indicator. There are however many different types of titrations

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Indicators in Titration

Many methods can be used to indicate the endpoint of a reaction; titrations often use visual indicators (the reactant mixture changes colour). In simple acid-base titrations a pH indicator may be used, such as phenolphthalein, which becomes pink when a certain pH (about 8.2) is reached or exceeded. Another example is methyl orange, which is red in acids and yellow in alkali solutions.

Not every titration requires an indicator. In some cases, either the reactants or the products are strongly coloured and can serve as the "indicator". For example, an oxidation-reduction titration using potassium permanganate (pink/purple) as the titrant does not require an indicator. When the titrant is reduced, it turns colourless. After the equivalence point, there is excess titrant present. The equivalence point is identified from the first faint pink color that persists in the solution being titrated.

Due to the logarithmic nature of the pH curve, the transitions are, in general, extremely sharp; and, thus, a single drop of titrant just before the endpoint can change the pH significantly—leading to an immediate colour change in the indicator. There is a slight difference between the change in indicator color and the actual equivalence point of the titration. This error is referred to as an indicator error, and it is indeterminate.

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