Introduction:
The degree of acidity is often responsible for the chemical behavior of substances present in solutions. For example, too much coffee or other food or drink sometimes causes gastric distress because of an acid imbalance in the stomach. A number of commercial antacid preparations are available to relieve this condition. In a number of instances it is necessary to be able to accurately determine the concentration of an acid (or a base) present in a solution. The most common units for expressing solution concentration are molarity (M, moles of solute/liter of solution) and normality (N, equivalents of solute/liter of solution).
Titration is a volumetric method of chemical analysis which involves taking an accurately measured volume of an acid and adding base until the solution becomes neutral (has the same number of H3O+ ions as OH- ions). The point at which the amounts of acid and base become equivalent is called the "equivalence point" and is usually signaled by a color change caused by some acid sensitive dye (called an indicator) which has been added to the solution. The two solutions (one of acid, the other of base) are delivered using volumetric glassware (in this experiment the glassware is a burrett) so that volumes will be accurately known. In addition, the concentration of either the acid or base must be accurately known (must be a standard solution). For a more in-depth introduction to titration, click on this hyper link: An Overview of Titrations
To be successful, a titration must involve a chemical reaction between the two solutions which are being mixed. This chemical reaction should be simple, rapid and complete. Although a titration may involve an acid base reaction, a precipitation reaction, a complexation reaction, or an oxidation reduction reaction, only the acid base reaction will be studied in this experiment. http://www.cbu.edu/~mcondren/c214/titration/titraon.htm
In the Arrhenius (classical) sense, an acid is any substance which furnishes protons (H+) and a base is any substance which furnishes hydroxide ions (OH-) in water. In this experiment, an aqueous solution of HCl is the acid and an aqueous solution of NaOH is the base. The overall balance (formula unit) equation for this reaction may be written as:
HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq)
H2O(l) +
NaCl(aq)
A more meaningful way to look at this reaction is to consider the total ionic equation:
H+(aq) + Cl-(aq)
+ Na+(aq) + OH-(aq)
H2O(l) +
Na+(aq) + Cl-(aq)
Because the Na+ and Cl- ions undergo no chemical change in the process, they are commonly called spectator ions and are often removed to give us the net ionic equation. Therefore, the net chemical reaction is:
H+(aq) + OH-(aq)
H2O(l)
This reaction between an acid and a base is called neutralization . The base is added to the acid until the solution contains an equivalent amounts of each. At this point, the acid is said to be "neutralized." If the proper chemical indicator has been added to the solution, a color change occurs. Using the measured volumes of the acid and base and the concentration of the "standard solution" (either acid or base), the concentration of the other reactant may be readily calculated from the equation:
VaNa = VbNb
When using solutions of acids and bases it is convenient to express concentration in terms of NORMALITY, the number of equivalents of solute in a liter of solution. A gram equivalent weight (one equivalent) of an acid is the mass of acid which provides one mole of H+ ions. The gram equivalent weight (one equivalent) of a base is the mass of base which reacts with one mole of H+ ions in the reaction above.
Number of equivalents = mass of acid or base / gram equivalent weight
Normality = Number of equivalents / Volume in liters
N = Number of equivalents / V
or Number of equivalents = V x N
This mathematical expression applies to both acids and bases. At the equivalence point:
Number of equivalents of acid = Number of equivalents of base
so:
VaNa = VbNb
Normality can also be thought of as the molarity of an acid or base times the number of H+ or OH- ions (equivalents) it produces. For example, a 0.1 M (molar) HCl solution is also 0.1 N (normality) because it generates only one H+ in solution. Likewise, a 0.3 M H2SO4 solution, would be 0.6 N because it generates two H+ in solution.
Consider the balanced equation:
HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq)
H2O(l)
+ NaCl(aq)
What mass of NaOH is necessary to completely neutralize one mole of HCl (36.46 g/mol)?
Since one mole of HCl can furnish one
mole of H+ ions,
and
one mole of OH- ions is required to neutralize that many,
one
mole of NaOH (40.00 g/mol) is required. IN THIS REACTION,
the
gram equivalent weight of HCl is 36.46 g and the gram equivalent weight
of
NaOH is 40.00 g. If one liter of hydrochloric acid contains 36.46
g
of HCl, its concentration is 1.000 N. One liter of a solution
containing
80.00 g of NaOH is described as a 2.000 N solution (pronounced "two
normal").
SOMETIMES THE GRAM EQUIVALENT WEIGHT AND THE MOLAR WEIGHT OF AN
ACID
OR BASE ARE THE SAME. WHILE THE MOLAR WEIGHT (MW) NEVER CHANGES,
THE
GRAM
EQUIVALENT WEIGHT (GEW) DEPENDS UPON THE REACTION INVOLVED:
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Materials:
Several clean beakers, 1 burrett, various repipetters, 10 mL graduated cylinder, standard HCl solution (approximately 0.1 N), 6 N NaOH solution, phenolphthalein indicator, distilled water, unknown acid solution, burrett clamp, ring stand or vertical upright.
Procedure:
Preparation of NaOH Solution:
(Updated 6/7/07 by C.R. Snelling)