39. Titration of strong acids and bases Flashcards
Summary the titration of HCl solution (known concentration) with NaOH solution (unknown concentration)
A strong base of known concentration (0.1 N NaOH) is added to a solution of a strong acid (HCl) of unknown concentration until the equivalence point gets marked by the color change of the indicator
A strong base of known concentration (0.1 N NaOH) is added to a solution of a strong acid (HCl) of unknown concentration until the equivalence point gets marked by the color change of the indicator.
Write equations for Dissociation of strong acid and base
HCl → Cl- + H+
NaOH → Na+ + OH-
HCl+NaOH → Cl- +Na++H2O
A strong base of known concentration (0.1 N NaOH) is added to a solution of a strong acid (HCl) of unknown concentration.
Which pH indicator is used? describe its properties.
Methyl orange
- Methyl orange changes colour from red to yellow in an aqueous acidic solution.
- effective pH range as
- pH 3.1 to pH 4.4.
Principles of the calculation for titration of strong acids and bases
n(H+)= n(OH-) = c1 x v1= c2 x v2
- c1 is the concentration of the titrating solution (known),
- v1 is the needed volume of the titrating solution (measured)
- c2 is the concentration of the unknown solution to get titrated (to be calculated)
- v2 is the known volume of the unknown solution to get titrated.
Can water form within titrated solution? How?
Protons react with hydroxide ions to form water:
H+ + OH- → H2O