CHEM 1040 Lecture Notes - Lecture 26: Titration, Equivalence Point, Ph Meter

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Chem 1040 lecture 26 buffer titrations. Titrations: a volumetric analysis where a known solution is used to find the concentration of an unknown solution. Requirements for a titration are: one solution"s concentration must be known, the titrant must be a strong acid/base, exact coefficients must be known, stoichiometric point where moles are equal must be observable. Neutralization reactions: acid + base salt + h2o, reaction is complete when the moles of h3o+ = oh, the equivalence point as observed by the ph meter or indicator. Indicators: sensitive to h3o+ of oh, usually weak organic acids that have an equilibrium in water, because the left (hin} and right (in. ) side of their equilibria have different colours: usually, the colour will change when [hin] = [in-] Indicator should be chosen so that the end point and equivalence point are the same: end point: when colour change occurs, equivalence point: when h3o+ = oh- Types of titrations: strong acid/strong base, h3o.

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