Lab Owl
Announcement:
Upon completion of this lab, log onto OWL.
A Lab Owl section should now appear in your courses and your
first assignment, Lab Owl: Exp 2, should appear in this section.
You have until the next scheduled laboratory to complete this
assignment. Three more
assignments will appear here as the semester progresses.
Remember, these Lab Owls are worth 25% of your laboratory grade.
Introduction:
Stoichiometry and Solids
When dealing with solids that one can weigh on a balance,
determining the number of moles in a particular sample is simply:
# mol =
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Mass in grams of the
substance
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Molar mass of the
substance
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Stoichiometry and Solutions
When dealing with solutions, one is usually concerned with
concentration. Concentration is not an unfamiliar term, in that in the
geographical and political context the term "people
concentration" is often used in allocating funds and describing
population densities in various areas of the continent. "People
concentration" is simply the number of people in a given region
divided by the area of that region. While the number of people in two
given regions may be the same, the area of the regions may be vastly
different, and thus represent different concentrations.
In the chemical world concentration is usually expressed in terms
of the quantity of a substance (moles) per liter of solution and is
called Molarity (M).
Concentration = M =
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mol of a substance
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Volume (Liters) of
the solution
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More often abbreviated to:
Determining the Molarity of a
Sodium Hydroxide Solution
The reaction between an acid and base produces a salt and water,
something that you may have heard before. In the reaction that you will
be investigating, the acid is potassium hydrogen phthalate (KHP), and
the base sodium hydroxide (NaOH).
NaOH(aq) + KHC8H4O4(aq)
= KNaC8H4O4(aq) + H2O(l)
As long as a reaction goes to completion, if one knows the
following information:
- the balanced
chemical equation for the reaction occurring (given above).
- the exact
quantity of one of the reagents (the KHP, a white solid, the mass of
which you will weigh)
then one can always determine the exact
amount of any other substance involved in the reaction. This is the
essence of the technique called quantitative chemical analysis. In this
experiment we are going to determine the concentration of a sodium
hydroxide solution by adding it to a known amount of KHP.
The process used to carry out this addition is called titration.
This is where one of the reagents (in our case NaOH) is added slowly
from a buret to a known quantity of the other reagent (KHP). The point
at which sufficient reactant has been added to just complete the
reaction is called the equivalence point. This is what we would like to
determine since at this point we have added sufficient amount (moles) of
NaOH to react with the entire amount (moles) of the KHP. A method to
determine this visually, is to add a dye (referred to as an indicator)
that changes color at or extremely close to this point. The point at
which the indicator actually changes color is referred to as the end
point. As far as we are concerned at this stage, the end point and the
equivalence point are the same. Later you will see that the criteria
used for choosing an indicator in a particular titration is, how close
the indicators end point (where it changes color) is to the equivalence
point of the titration.
Calculating the Molarity of the
Sodium Hydroxide Solution
In order to determine this we need to know the number of moles of
NaOH that reacted with the KHP and the volume in liters of the NaOH
solution that contained that said number of moles of NaOH.
You know the mass in grams of the KHP used in the titration:
# mol KHP =
|
Mass in grams of KHP
|
Molar mass of the
KHP (204.24 g/mol)
|
We have a balanced chemical equation in which we now know the
exact quantity of one of the reagents (KHP) - NaOH(aq)
+ KHC8H4O4(aq) = KNaC8H4O4(aq)
+ H2O(l) -
thus we can determine the number of moles of NaOH that reacted with the
KHP.
# mol KHP
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x NaOH
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=
# mol NaOH
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Where x is to coefficient in front of the NaOH and
the KHP respectively in the balanced chemical equation.
|
|
x KHP
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Finally, the molarity of the sodium hydroxide solution can be
determined:
M =
|
# mol NaOH
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Volume determined from the buret - final volume of
the buret minus the initial volume - converted to liters.
|
V(L)
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Precision
and Accuracy
These are two terms that often lead to some confusion. Precision
is the degree to which a number of measurements are reproducible (how
close each measurement is to one another). Accuracy, on the other hand,
is how good the actual measurement is. How does it compare to the known
value, or, in the case where it is not known, how close is it to
identical measurements being made by other people on the same system. It
is possible to have a high degree of precision yet lack accuracy. This
is often either the failure in some aspect of the experimental design or
of the operator. This lab is a case in point. You will endeavor to
determine when the reaction has reached its equivalence point by
observing a color change in a dye. It may well happen that for each
trial you obtain a good degree of precision (reproducibility) but the
color intensity to which you titrated each sample was a few drops beyond
the actual equivalence point, hence poor accuracy.
As everyone makes up their own solution, we have no real test of
accuracy on this experiment. However you will calculate a percent
difference for each of your trials, which is a crude measurement of your
reproducibility (precision). It will be crude due to the fact that a
very small number of trials are used. Percent difference describes the
difference between an experimentally determined value and a reference or
accepted value. In this experiment, the molarity of sodium hydroxide is
not actually known so the average value of the molarity is taken as the
reference or accepted value. The percent difference in this experiment
will, then, be determined by comparing the molarity in each separate
titration trial with the average molarity.
% Difference =
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Trial '#' Molarity - Average Molarity
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x
100
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You
are aiming
for a difference
of ±1%.
|
Average Molarity
|