1 / 12

Acid/Base Indicators

Acid/Base Indicators. What is an Indicator?. They are themselves acids and bases. During a titration, the acid/base indicator is also being titrated. It changes from the protonated to the deprotonated form during titration with a base and vice versa during titration with an acid.

efia
Download Presentation

Acid/Base Indicators

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Acid/Base Indicators

  2. What is an Indicator? • They are themselves acids and bases. • During a titration, the acid/base indicator is also being titrated. • It changes from the protonated to the deprotonated form during titration with a base and vice versa during titration with an acid. • As the indicator is also being titrated, you must only use a few drops, or too much titrant will get consumed by the indicator.

  3. What is an Indicator? • An acid/base indicator turns different colors at different pH. • Since they have different colors depending on pH, they are very useful as visual endpoints in acid/base titrations.

  4. Thymol Blue: pKIn1 = 1.7; pKIn2 = 8.9

  5. What is an Indicator? • The protonated and deprotonated form of the indicators absorb light of different wavelengths. • As the pH changes, the ratio of protonated to deprotonated forms changes, so the color of the solution changes. • We call the protonated indicator HIn, and the deprotonated indicator In or In-.

  6. What is an Indicator? • Since the indicator is itself an acid or base, it has a pKa value. • This is typically called the pKHIn • The color change will occur within ±1 pH unit of the pKHIn • If the pH = pKHIn , then there is a 50:50 ratio of HIn to In-. • The H-H equation becomes:

  7. What is an Indicator? • HIn has one color, In has a different color, and there is a transition region between the two colors. • So when you get within ±1 pH unit of the pKHIn, you will start to see the color change gradually between the acidic and basic forms.

  8. Choosing and Using Indicators (Ch 10.4) • An acid base indicator changes colors within ±1 pH unit of the pKHIn. • If the pH < pKHIn -1, then the indicator is protonated with the acidic color. • If the pH > pKHIn -1, then the indicator is deprotonated with the basic color. • If the pH is in between these, there is a mixture of both and there is a mixture of colors as well.

  9. Choosing and Using Indicators (Ch 10.4) • To pick an appropriate indicator, you need to have a good idea of what pH the titration equivalence point will be. • For example, a strong acid-strong base titration will have a pH of 7.00 at the equivalence point. • So knowing this, how do you choose an indicator?

  10. Choosing and Using Indicators (Ch 10.4) • You choose an indicator whose pKHIn is close to the equivalence point pH. • This way the visual endpoint the indicator gives will be very close to the actual equivalence point. • The error is the indicator error, and it can be positive or negative. • If you choose well, the error will be much less than 1%.

  11. Choosing and Using Indicators (Ch 10.4) • If you choose well, the error will be much less than 1%. • This is because the pH of a titration changes dramatically near the equivalence point. • A very small addition of the titrant causes a large change in the pH. • So if the indicator changes colors near this drastic pH change, the indicator error will be small.

  12. Choosing and Using Indicators (Ch 10.4) • So looking at a chart of indicators, choose one whose pKHIn or whose transition range overlaps with the suspected or known equivalence point pH. • Looking at the chart, what would be good indicators to use for the titration of HCl with NaOH, and what color change would indicate the endpoint?

More Related