My chemistry teacher wouldn't have liked that at allOriginally posted by marsenal
I find that an extremely useful thing about having two people is that it's easier for one to swirle/shake the flask, while the other is letting in the solution from the burette. Otherwise it doesn't really matter in my opinion.
Why on earth do you need to focus on the burette during a titration? You turn the tap on full blast until a few ml before your rough endpoint, you shouldn't even need to more than glance at what you're swirling because you know you're nowhere near the endpoint. Left hand on tap, right hand swirling. At the end, you carefully manipulate the tap so drips or only a very small stream of reagent go into the conical flask, you should do this purely by touch as you can see the stream when you're looking at the flask as you swirl it.Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
What marsenal said was correct however. It is much wiser to have one person swirling whilst the other person reads the volume, since it is hard to focus on a colour change and a reading at the same time. Therefore, 2 people is better than 1.
ROFL!Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
Ahh Kini mini, your logic is sound, but ultimately flawed.
I don't know if it is explicitly mentioned in the syllabus, but it certainly could be asked as a matter of experimental procedure.
You need to observe where exactly the end point occurs by looking at the increments. if the person goes a tad overboard it's okay because the person swirling will call to the reader and that will signal him to stop the burette and make a reading.
Hehe, nah, I guess it depends which way you look at it, both perspectives are valid IMO.
Btw, is that question in the syllabus??
You forgot about the person to cover the top of the burette to stop the reaction with the air.Originally posted by speed_bump
Why stop at 2 people, i feel when doing the prac side of things that 5 people is the ideal team amount.
1 to turn the tap on the burette, 1 to turn swirl the flask, one to watch the burette, 1 to hold a piece of paper under the flask, and one to make sure the person that is turning the tap does so at the right time.
But that might just be me, im not sure.