Titration practical Flashcards
1
Q
What are titrations used to do
A
find the concentration of an unknown solution
2
Q
method (titration)
A
- use a pipette to transfer 25cm3 of sodium hydroxide solution into a conical flask
- Add 5 drops of an indicator such as methyl orange to the alkali in the conical flask
- place the conical flask on a white tile
- Film a burette with sulfuric acid
- Slowly add the acid to the alkali until the solution is netral
- once we start to see a colour change, add the acid drop by drop until the solution is neutral
- swirl the mixture - Read the volume of acid added from the burette
- Repeat the titration until you get two readings within 0.1cm3
- take a mean of these for our final volume
3
Q
why is a conical flask used
A
to reduce the risk of splashing
4
Q
why should we use a pipette filler
A
to draw liquid into the pipette, to allow the liquid to drain out of the pipette, as blowing the liquid out will give you an incorrect volume
5
Q
why do we place the conical flask above a white tile
A
so that we can see the colour change more easily
6
Q
why is it important to swirl the solution
A
to make sure the acid and alkali mix
7
Q
where should we read the burette from
A
the bottom of the miniscus (curve)
8
Q
equation for concentration
A
- conc = mol/volume
- conc = mass /volume
9
Q
how to convert from cm to dm
A
divide by 1000