Primarygun Posted March 8, 2007 Posted March 8, 2007 There is a solution containing a mixture of carbonate ions and hydrogencarbonate ions. A few drops of phenolphthalein indicator is added into the solution, ammonium solution is added drop by drop into the solution following. When there's the sign of the permanent change of the colour of the indicator, my teacher calimed that all the hydrogencarbonate ions have been reacted through the reaction (HCO3 - + H+ ---> CO2 + H2O) My idea is that all carbonate ions did completely reacted instead.
John Cuthber Posted March 8, 2007 Posted March 8, 2007 Congratulations! You have spotted your teacher's mistake. If you add an acid (and ammonium salts are acids, albeit weak ones) to a mixture of bases like carbonate and hydrogencarbonate, the acid will react with the strongest base first. For what it's worth if you did have carbonate and CO2 present they would react to give hydrogencarbonate Na2CO3 + H2O +CO2 --> 2 NaHCO3 A good way to embarrass the teacher would be to ask why nobody saw the bubbles of CO2 they said had been produced, but I'll let you decide if that's a good idea.
Primarygun Posted March 8, 2007 Author Posted March 8, 2007 Thanks a lot. By the way, do you know why the curve(the pH against the volume of hydrochloric acid added into the mixture) is rather vertical at the point where the indicator changes its colour? I thought it ought to be gradual instead.
Darkblade48 Posted March 9, 2007 Posted March 9, 2007 At the point of inflection of the titration curve, a small change in the concentration of acidic or basic ions will result in a large change.
Primarygun Posted March 9, 2007 Author Posted March 9, 2007 I am not sure what the point of inflection of the titration curve means. IN the case of only acid and base titration, say NaOH and HCl, I could perceive the term in the way that the point is when the dominating ion changes.( from OH- to H+)
John Cuthber Posted March 11, 2007 Posted March 11, 2007 Essentially, its because on one side of the equivalence point it's acid; on the other side it's a base and it has to get suddenly from one to the other.
Borek Posted March 12, 2007 Posted March 12, 2007 Download BATE and play with titration curves to get familar with them Program is commercial but there is a 30-day free trial. Borek -- Chemical calculators at www.chembuddy.com BATE - pH calculator
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now