Makes sence....wish I read it earlier...I handed it in yesterday. I worked it out to be roughly 25%, which is horribly wrong, but hey it's better than nothing.
I pretty much lost you in this step:
.'. m(N) in volumetric flask = (60+60+150)/25 x 0.6202
=6.69816g
I think what you worked out was the amount of nitrogen in the 60mL solution...which has a fraction of the original 1g.
This is how I (and a fellow student) worked it out:
0.00157moles of HCl (using n=m/M)
0.006 moles NaOH (same deal)
HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + H2O
.'. n(HCl)= 0.00157 moles, which = n(NaOH)=0.00157 moles
meaning 0.00157 moles reacted with HCl, therefore there was 0.00157 moles left over from the reaction with ammonium.
.'. 0.006 - 0.00157 moles = 0.00443 moles NaOH
meaning 0.00443 moles reacted with ammonium.
NH4^+ + OH^- --> NH3 + H2O
n(OH) = n(NH4)
0.00443 = 0.00443 moles
Weight of N atoms in NH4 is
n=m/M
0.00443=m/14.00674
m=0.620498582 grams N reacted with 60mL NaOH in 60mL of fertiliser soln
.'. 0.620498582/60 x 250 = 0.2585410758g on N atoms in 250mL with 1g of fertiliser.
.'. 0.2585410758/1 x 100 = 25.85%(w/w) N in 1g of fertiliser.
I went wrong somewhere in there....but in my discussion I put it down to bad experimental procedure (I didn't have enough time to let all the NH3 boil out of the solution, hence the pH of the solution i was titrating into might have been affected, hence distorting the results)
Thanks heaps anyway
Mitch
P.S. How do you write in sub/super script in these windows???