Required practical 2: Strong acid & strong alkali titration
Objective:
To determine the reacting volumes of a strong acid and a strong alkali by titration
Hypothesis:
The titration method can be used to calculate the concentration of an acid
Materials:
- 25 cm3 volumetric pipette
- Pipette filler
- 50 cm3 burette
- 250 cm3 conical flask
- Small funnel
- 0.1 mol/dm3 sodium hydroxide solution
- Sulfuric acid – concentration unknown
- Phenolphthalein indicator
- Clamp stand, clamp & white tile
Performing a titration
Examiner Tip
Use a funnel to fill the burette but be sure to remove it before starting the practical as it can drip liquid into the burette, making the initial reading false.
Method:
- Use the pipette and pipette filler and place exactly 25 cm3 sodium hydroxide solution into the conical flask
- Place the conical flask on a white tile so the tip of the burette is inside the flask
- Add a few drops of a suitable indicator to the solution in the conical flask
- Perform a rough titration by taking the burette reading and running in the solution in 1 – 3 cm3 portions, while swirling the flask vigorously
- Quickly close the tap when the end-point is reached (sharp colour change) and record the volume, placing your eye level with the meniscus
- Now repeat the titration with a fresh batch of sodium hydroxide
- As the rough end-point volume is approached, add the solution from the burette one drop at a time until the indicator just changes colour
- Record the volume to the nearest 0.05cm3
- Repeat until you achieve two concordant results (two results that are within 0.1cm3 of each other) to increase accuracy
Results:
Record your results in a suitable table, e.g:
Rough Titre | Titre 1 | Titre 2 | |
Final reading (cm3) | |||
First reading (cm3) | |||
Titre (cm3) |
Evaluation:
Only concordant results should be used to calculate a mean titre
Conclusion:
The mean titre is calculated and used to calculate the concentration of the acid in mol/dm3, ignoring any anomalous results