I was thinking... what are the safety precautions of titrations, (apart from wearing lab coats and safety glasses)?
I was doing a question where we had to write out the ionic equation of this reaction:
CH3COOH(aq) + KOH(aq) ---> CH3COOK(aq) + 2H20(l)
When I separated the ions and cancelled them on either side, I got
H+(aq) + OH-(aq) ---> H2O(l)
But that's not the answer... instead it's CH3COOH(aq) + OH-(aq) --->CH3COO-(aq)+ H20(l)
Don't understand it...
Quick query about pipettes, because we've been asked to draw them, I think they're designed to allow for a little bit of solution at the bottom? So, after delivering your 20ml of solution, the meniscus would be near the bottom of the pipette since there'd be some solution left, if you were to draw it, yes?
I've noticed that sometimes you get examples of titration that dilute the
sample before titration occurs... why is dilution done sometimes? Supposedly, if it were not done, you'd get much greater titre volumes, but that doesn't make too much sense to me... an explanation, perhaps?
:wave: