yes please. msg-ed youyea my prac went great i got it all right but i lost marks only coz i wasnt wearing safety glasses and was using acid.. thats all i went wrong...
i have these worksheets that have the my exact assessmenttitration pracon it if u want 2 me scan it and send it 2 u?its really helpful.
hmmm... 10 times 3-5 drops. LOLI usually only complete two titrations - one test run (let the solution in the burette flow out quickly and gain a rough idea of the equivalence point), and one proper run (I'm pretty lazy when it comes to titrations, so I put all my time and effort into gaining just the one result and using that as my average, ahah).
My pet hates regarding titration:
- acid/base on the sides of the conical flask (always wash it down with distilled water)
- bubbles in the burette and/or pipette (give it a good tap, or refill)
- not using enough indicator (textbooks say to put around 3-5 drops, put 10 times that amount)
- solution turns into the equivalence colour, but then changes back to its original colour after three seconds or so (this is actually a good thing, and I usually take this reading as my final result)
Hope this helps,
Good luck in your exam!
I KNOW, LOL..that's like 1/4 of the bottle of indicator.hmmm... 10 times 3-5 drops. LOL
I believe you have confused the pipette and the burette. You put the solution of unknown concentration in the pipette, so you can control the volume of it needed.doesn't the one that you are measuring go in the pipette
if you know the amount of one, you put that in the burette because then you can get a reading from the pipette on to how much you have used to get the indicator colour right
It is best to use acid in the burette because strong bases can affect the functioning of the teflon tap.You put the solution of known concentration into the burette, and measure how much of that you use to 'neutralise' the unknown
Lol I'm certain it's the other way around jetblack. The known concentration (known as the primary standard solution e.g. Na2CO3 mixed with distilled water) goes into the pipette. The HCl (secondary standard) goes into the burette.I believe you have confused the pipette and the burette. You put the solution of unknown concentration in the pipette, so you can control the volume of it needed.
we got taught to put bases in pipette and acid in burette, coz if you put bases in the burette, it'll react(?) with the glass (silicon stuff) that makes the burette and cause little scratches, so it won't be accurate anymore.Does it matter where you put the base and acid? :S