Standardization of Acids and Bases

Description

Solutions of known concentration are prepared by dissolving measured masses of standard acids in distilled water. The concentrations of unknown solutions of sodium hydroxide are determined by titration.

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Set

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Hazards

Sodium hydroxide damages tissue and causes blindness. Oxalic acid, phenolphthalein, and potassium hydrogen phthalate are toxic.

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Precautions

Wear eye protection. Do not ingest chemicals.

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Procedure

Solid Acid

  1. Follow the "Titration Skills Checklist." (below)
  2. Place approximately 3 g of solid oxalic acid in a weighing container.
  3. Clean three 250-mL Erlenmeyer flasks and label them 1 through 3.
  4. Place a carefully weighed sample of roughly 1.0 g into each flask by using the following method:
  5. Weigh the container and solid acid as accurately as your balance will allow.
  6. Record this weight in the Data Table.
  7. Remove 1 gram from the balance reading.
  8. Transfer solid to the flask carefully by tapping and checking the weight to see if it is close. Initially the vial will be too heavy for the weights on the balance.
  9. Tap and reweigh until about 1 g is transferred to flask 1. (It is not necessary to have exactly one gram in each flask but it is necessary to know accurately how much you have in each flask.) The balance will be swinging slowly if a triple beam balance is used.
  10. Reweigh the container accurately.
  11. Record in the Data Table.
  12. Repeat for flasks 2 and 3.
  13. Add 30 mL of distilled water. Swirl. Do not be concerned if the solid acid does not dissolve.
  14. 2 to 3 drops of phenolphthalein to each flask.
  15. Rinse the buret with three 5-mL portions of the NaOH solution which you have in the large flask.
  16. Fill the buret to a convenient volume between the 0-mL and 1-mL mark. (Some workers use a funnel in the buret; others do not.)
  17. Make sure the tip is full. If not, twist the stopcock very rapidly to remove air bubbles.
  18. Use a 3" x 5" card with a thick black stripe drawn on it. Place this card behind and just below the meniscus. A reflection of the stripe appears on the liquid surface and makes the meniscus more visible. Record the initial buret reading in the Data Table.
  19. Place the titration flask under the buret.
  20. Open the stopcock to add base to that the titration can begin. Notice how the stopcock is held.
  21. It is essential to swirl the solution continuously during the titration process.
  22. Periodically stop the flow and rinse the walls of the flask with distilled water.
  23. Continue adding sodium hydroxide solution more and more slowly until one drop of titrant causes a pink color that does not disappear even with agitation.
  24. Record the volume in the buret.
  25. To check, add one more drop to be sure the solution was pink.
  26. Record the final reading in the Data Table.
  27. Repeat for Flasks 2 and 3.
  28. Clean the flasks.

Acid Solutions

  1. Label two flasks 1 and 2.
  2. Pipet 25 mL of the sulfuric acid solution into each flask.
  3. Add 25 mL of distilled water and 2 to 3 drops of phenolphthalein to each flask.
  4. See the detailed titrating instructions for the solid acid.
  5. Record the initial buret reading in the Data Table.
  6. Titrate the sulfuric acid solution in Flask 1 to the lightest pink that your eye can detect and that will not go away with stirring.
  7. Record the final buret reading in Table 2.
  8. Follow the recording and titrating steps for the remaining sulfuric acid solution.
  9. Complete the tables, show sample calculations, and answer the follow up questions.

Titration Skills Checklist

______ Buret clean before use
______ Air excluded from tip
______ Starting volume correctly recorded
______ Unknown solution correctly measured
______ Indicator added
______ Stopcock held correctly
______ Endpoint satisfactory
______ Final volume correctly recorded
______ Buret rinsed after use

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Handout

Name ___________________________ Class ________

Teacher__________________________

DoChem 102 Standardization of Acids and Bases

Titration Skills Checklist

______ Buret clean before use
______ Air excluded from tip
______ Starting volume correctly recorded
______ Unknown solution correctly measured
______ Indicator added
______ Stopcock held correctly
______ Endpoint satisfactory
______ Final volume correctly recorded
______ Buret rinsed after use
_______________________________________________
Data Table for Solid Acids: Flask 1 Flask 2 Flask 3
Mass of container and acid, g      
Mass of container, g      
Mass of acid, g      
Molar mass of solid acid, g/mol      
Moles solid acid, mol      
Moles titrated H+, mol      
Moles NaOH, mol      
Final buret reading, mL      
Initial buret reading, mL      
Volume NaOH, mL      
Volume NaOH, L      
M NaOH (mol NaOH/ L)      
Average M NaOH      

________________________________________________

Data Table for Acid Solutions: Flask 1 Flask 2
Volume acid pipeted, mL    
Volume acid pipeted, L    
Final buret reading, mL    
Initial buret reading, mL    
Volume of NaOH, mL    
Volume of NaOH, L    
Molarity NaOH, mol/L    
Moles NaOH, mol    
Moles titrated H±, mol    
Moles H2SO4, mol    
Molarity H2SO4, mol/L    
Average M H2SO4 ______

Closure Questions:

  1. List sources of error for this experiment.
  2. A 0.300 M solution of NaOH cannot be made up by weighing solid NaOH and dissolving in the appropriate amount of water. Suggest reasons why.
  3. Why is phenolphthalein a suitable indicator for this experiment?
  4. Identify other indicators that might be used.
  5. Find the molarity of a solution containing 2.00 g of oxalic acid dissolved in 100.0 mL of H2O.
  6. If 25.00 mL of NaOH were used to neutralize 32.0 mL of the acid from the solution described above, what is the molarity of the NaOH?

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Handout Makeup

Name ___________________________ Class ________

Teacher__________________________

DoChem 102 Standardization of Acids and Bases

Watch the movie and record the buret readings.

  1. Record the initial reading of the buret on the movie. _____
  2. Record the final reading of the buret on the movie. _____

Use the data below to calculate the molarity of the NaOH solution.

Data Table for Solid Acids: Flask 1
Mass of container and acid, g 23.26
Mass of container, g 22.24
Mass of acid, g _______
Molar mass of solid acid, g/mol 90.00
Moles solid acid, mol _______
Moles titrated H+, mol _______
Moles NaOH, mol _______
Final buret reading, mL 43.38
Initial buret reading, mL 0.12
Volume NaOH, mL _______
Volume NaOH, L _______
M NaOH (mol NaOH/ L) _______

4. Calculate the molarity of the sulfuric acid solution titrated below.

Data Table for Acid Solutions: Flask 1 Flask 2
Volume acid pipeted, mL 25.00 25.00
Volume acid pipeted, L ______ ______
Final buret reading, mL 25.56 26.64
Initial buret reading, mL 0.02 0.90
Volume of NaOH, mL ______ ______
Volume of NaOH, L ______ ______
Molarity NaOH, mol/L 0.538 0.538
Moles NaOH, mol ______ ______
Moles titrated H±, mol ______ ______
Moles H2SO4, mol ______ ______
Molarity H2SO4, mol/L ______ ______
Average M H2SO4 ______

Closure Questions:

  1. List sources of error for this experiment.
  2. A 0.300 M solution of NaOH cannot be made up by weighing solid NaOH and dissolving in the appropriate amount of water. Suggest reasons why.
  3. Why is phenolphthalein a suitable indicator for this experiment?
  4. Identify other indicators that might be used.
  5. Find the molarity of a solution containing 2.00 g of oxalic acid dissolved in 100.0 mL of H2O.
  6. If 25.00 mL of NaOH were used to neutralize 32.0 mL of the acid from the solution described above, what is the molarity of the NaOH?

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Teachers Guide

Purpose

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Materials

(per 10 students working in pairs)

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Lab Hints

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Time

Teacher preparation: 30 min

Class time: 2 periods

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Precautions

Wear eye protection. Provide a working eye wash. An emergency shower should be available. Do not ingest chemicals.

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Disposal

The materials used in this experiment may be disposed of safely at the sink after neutralization.

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Sample Data

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Closure?

Closure Questions:

  1. List sources of error for this experiment.
  2. A 0.300 M solution of NaOH cannot be made up by weighing solid NaOH and dissolving in the appropriate amount of water. Suggest reasons why.
  3. Why is phenolphthalein a suitable indicator for this experiment?
  4. Identify other indicators that might be used.
  5. Find the molarity of a solution containing 2.00 g of oxalic acid dissolved in 100.0 mL of H2O.
  6. If 25.00 mL of NaOH were used to neutralize 32.0 mL of the acid from the solution described above, what is the molarity of the NaOH?

Answers to Closure Questions:

  1. Weighing errors supersede all other errors when a centigram balance is used. Weighing contributes 2-3% error at the outset when oxalic acid is used as the standard. The weighing error will be smaller with potassium hydrogen phthalate.
  2. NaOH absorbs both water and carbon dioxide. It is too difficult to keep chemically pure to be used as a standard.
  3. Phenolphthalein changes color in a solution where the [OH-] is slightly higher than the [H+]. Square braces, [xx], are used to represent molar concentrations: [H+] is read as "The molar concentration of H+."
  4. Bromthymol blue, methyl red, and methyl orange may be used as indicators for the sulfuric acid titration. Phenolphthalein is the best choice for the oxalic acid titration.
  5. Molarity = (mol/L)
    =2.00g H2C2O4 x (1 mol H2C2O4 / 90.00 g H2C2O4) x (1/ 100 mL) x (1000 mL/ L)
    = 0.222 M.
  6. 32 mL x (1 L/1000 mL) x (0.222 mol H2C2O4/ 1 L)
    x (2 mol H+ / 1 mol H2C2O4 ) x (1 mol NaOH/1 mol H+)
    x (1/ 25 mL) x (1000 mL/ 1 L)
    = 0.568 mol.

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Makeup Ans.
  1. 19.83
  2. 0.33
  3. and 4. see sample data for the calculated values.
    See closure question answers.

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Key Words

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