Acid Base Titration

Titration is a method of analysis that will allow you to determine the precise endpointof a reaction and therefore the precise quantity of reactant in the titration flask. 

The chemical reaction involved in acid-base titration is known as neutralisation reaction.

Indicator

An indicator is a substance which is used to determine the end point in a titration. 

In acid base  titrations,  organic  substances  (weak  acids  or  weak  bases)  are  generally  used  as indicators. T

hey change their colour within a certain pH range. 

The colour change and the pH range of somecommon indicators are tabulated below

Indicator

pH range

Colour change

Methyl orange

3.2-4.5

Pink to yellow

Methyl red

4.4-6.5

Red to yellow

Litmus

5.5-7.5

Red to blue

Phenol red

6.8-8.4

Yellow to red

Phenolphthalein

8.3-10.5

Colourless to pink

 Theory of Indicator

 An acid-base indicator is aweak acid or a weak base. Examples of indictors used in acid basereactions

Litmus

Phenolphthalein

Methyl orange

thymol blue, methyl yellow, methyl orange, bromphenol blue, bromcresol green, methyl red, bromthymol blue, phenol red, neutral red, phenolphthalein, thymolphthalein, alizarin yellow, tropeolin O, nitramine, and trinitrobenzoic acid.

Indicators

pH range

Color for weeak acid

Color for conjugated base

Metyl orange

4-6

Orange

Yellow

Bromophenol blue

6-7

Yellow

Blue

Thymol blue

8-9

Yellow

Blue

Phenolphthalein

9-10

Colourless

Pink

Alizarin yellow

10-12

Yellow

Red


Theory of acid-base indicators:Two theories have been proposed to explain the change of colour of acid-base indicators with change in pH.

 

Ostwald's theory:


According to this theory, the colour change is due to ionisation of the acid-base indicator


The unionised form has different colour than the ionised form. 


The ionisation of the indicator islargely affected in acids and bases as it is either a weak acid or a weak base. 

If the indicator is a weak acid, its ionisation is very much low in acids due to common H+ ions while it is fairly ionised in alkalise. 


if the indicator is a weak base, its ionisation is large in acids and low in alkalises due to common OH- ions.

 

Considering two important indicatorsphenolphthalein (a weak acid) and methyl orange (a weak base), Ostwald theory can beillustrated as follows:

 

Phenolphthalein: 

It can berepresented as HPh. 

It ionises in solution to a small extent as:

HPh H+ + Ph-

 

Colourless Pink Applying law of mass action,

K = [H+][Ph- ]/[HpH]


The un-dissociated molecules of phenolphthalein are colourless while Ph- ions are pink in colour.  


Let us derive Handerson equation for an indicator

 

HIn + H2O ↔ H3O+ + In-         Acid form' 'Base form' Methyl orange:

It is a very weak base and can be represented as MeOH. It is ionized in solution to give Me+

 

and OH- ions.

 

MeOH ↔ Me+ + OH

 

Yellow Red Applying law of mass action, K = [Me+ ][OH- ]/[MeOH]

 

In presence of an acid, OH- ions are removed in the form of water molecules and the above equilibriumshifts to right hand side. 


Thus, sufficient Me+ ions are produced which impart red colour to the solution. 


On addition of alkali, the concentration of OH"ions increases in the solution and the equilibrium shifts to left hand side, i.e., the ionisation of MeOH is practically negligible. 


Thus, the solution acquires the colour of unionised methyl orange molecules, i.e., yellow.

 

Indictors         pKind        pH


 

Methylorange

3.7

3.1-4.4

Phenophthaline

9.3

8.3-10.0

 

Titration curve

 

 


1) Titration of a strong acid with a strong base

 

In a strong acid-strong base titration, the acid and base will react to form a neutral solution. At the equivalence point of the reaction, hydronium (H+) and hydroxide (OH-) ions will react to form water, leading to a pH of 7


2) Titration of a weak acid with a strong base



In the titration of a weak acid with a strong base, the conjugate base of the weak acid will make the pH at the equivalence point greater than 7. Therefore, you would want an indicator to change in that pH range.

 

3) Titration of a strong acid with a weak base

 

 In a weak base-strong acid titration, the acid and base will react to form an acidic solution. 

A conjugate acid will be produced during the titration, which then reacts with water to

 form hydronium ions

This results in a solution with a pH lower than 7


4) Titration of a weak base with a weak acid




 When a weak acid reacts with a weak base, the equivalence point solution will be basic if

 the base is stronger and acidic if the acid is stronger; if both are of equal strength, then the

 equivalence pH will be neutral.

Non aqueous titration

 

Non aqueous titration is the titration of substances dissolved in solvent other thanwater. 

It is the most common titrimetric procedure used in pharmacopoeial assays and serves a double purpose: it is suitable for the titration of very weak acid and very weak base, and it provides

a solvent in which oirganic compound are soluble. 

The  most  commonly  used  procedure  is  the  titration  of organic base with perchloric acid  in anhydrous acetic acid.

These assays sometimes take some perfecting in terms of beinable to judge the endpoint  precisely.

 

The Karl Fischer Titration for watercontent is anothernonaqueous titration, usually done in methanol or sometimes in ethanol.  

Since water is the analyte in this method, it cannot also be used as the solvent.

 

Need of Non aqueous titrations

 Often times we need to perform an acid-base titration in non-aqueous solvent due to:

 Theanalyte is too weak acid or a base to be  titrated in H2O

 Reactants or products are insoluble in H2O

 Reactants or products react with H2O

 Titration in H2O doesn’t allow a sharp end point  but in anonaqueous solvent with a stronger base than OH- itis possible to get an sharp end point

 

 

Bronsted Lowry; a general definition applicable  to both aqueous andnon-aqueousS systems


 

Lewis theory: Acids: electron pair acceptors

 

Bases: electron pair donors

 

Strong acids in water:

 

HCl       +        H2O       →                H3O+                      +         Cl-

(Acid)                 (Base)               (Conjugated Acid)       (Conjugated base)


Weak acids in water:

 

HCOOH         +         H2O    <-----------> H3O+                   +          HCOO-

(Acid)                         (Base)                    (Conjugated Acid)        (Conjugated base)

 

Weak acids in non-aqueous solvents:

HCOOH         +         CH3NH2              <----------->   CH3NH4+              +         HCOO (Acid)                (Base)                    (Conjugated Acid) (Conjugated base)

 

It follows from thesedefinitions that an acid may be either:

*    an electrically neutral molecule, e.g. HCl, or

 

*    a positively charged cation, e.g. C6H5NH3+, or

 

*    a negatively charged anion, e.g. HSO4-.  A base may be either:

 

*    an electricially neutral molecule, e.g. C6H5NH2, or an anion, e.g.  Cl-.

 

*    Substances which are potentially acidic can function as acids only in the presence of a base to which they can donate a proton. Conversely basic properties do not become apparent  unless an acid also is present.

*    The apparent strength of an acid or base is determined by  theextent of its reaction with a solvent.

*    In aqueous solution all strong acids appear equally strong  because they react with the solvent to undergo almost   complete conversionto hydroniumion (H3O+) and the acid anion.

*    In a weakly protophilic solvent such as acetic acid, the   extent of formation of the acetonium ion (CH3COOH2+)   due to the addition of a proton provides a more sensitive   differentiation of the strength of acids and shows that the   order of decreasing strength for acids is perchloric,  hydrobromic, sulfuric, hydrochloric, and nitric.

*    Acetic acid reacts incompletely with water to form  hydronium ion and is, therefore, a weak acid.

*    In contrast, it dissolves in a base such as ethylenediamine,  and reacts so completely with the solvent that it behaves as  a strong acid.This so-called levelling effect.

 

Levelling effect or solvent levelling

 

*    Levelling effect or solvent: leveling refers to the effect of solvent on the properties of acids and bases.

*    The strength of a strong acid is limited ("leveled")by the basicity of the   solvent.

 

Similarly the strength of astrong base is leveled bythe acidity of  the solvent.

 

*    When a strong acid is dissolved in water, it reacts with it to form hydronium   ion (H3O+).[2] An example of thiswould be the followingreaction, where  "HA" is the strong acid:

*    HA + H2O A− + H3O+

 

*    Any acid that is stronger than H3O+ reacts with H2O to form H3O+.  Therefore, no acid stronger than H3O+ exists in H2O.

*    Similarly, when ammonia is the solvent, the strongest acid is ammonium   (NH4+), thus HCl and a super acid exert the sameacidifying effect.

*    The same argument applies to bases. In water, OH is the strongest base.  Thus,even though sodium amide (NaNH2) is an exceptional base (pKa of  NH3 ~ 33), in water it is only as good as sodium hydroxide.

*    On the other hand, NaNH2 is afar more basic reagent in ammonia than is  NaOH.

Solvents used in non aqueous titration

*    Solvent which are used in non aqueous titration  are called non aqueous solvent.

 

*    They are following types:-

1.   Aprotic Solvent

 

2.   Protogenic Solvent

 

3.   Protophillic Solvent

 

4.   AmphiproticSolvent

 

*    Aprotic  solvents  are  neutral,  chemically  inert  substances    such  as  benzene  and chloroform. They have a low dielectric   constant, do not react with either acids or bases and  therefore do not favor ionization.The fact that picric acid gives a colorless solution in benzene  which becomes yellow on adding aniline shows that picric  acid is not dissociated in benzene solution and also that in  the presence of the base aniline it functions as an acid, the  development of yellow color being due to formation of the picrate ion.Carbon tetrachlorideand toluene come in this group; they   possess low dielectric constants, do not cause ionization in  solutes and do not undergo reactions with acids and bases. Aprotic solvents are frequently used to dilute reaction  mixture

*    Protogenic solventsare acidic substances, e.g.  sulfuric acid. They exert a leveling effect on bases. Anhydrous acids such as hydrogen fluoride and  sulphuric acid fall in this category, because of their  strength and ability to donate protons, they enhance the strength of weak bases.Ex:- sulphuric acid , formic acid, propanoic acid, acetic anhydride etc.They have high dielectric constant and ionised  because of their strength and ability to donate protons.

*    Protophilic solvents are the substances that  possess a high affinity for protons. The over all  reaction can be represented as:

 

HB+S SH++ B-


Theequilibrium in this reversible reaction willbe  generally influenced by the nature of the acid and  the solvent.Weak acids arenormally used in the presence of  strongly protophilic solvents as their acidic strengths arethen enhanced and then become comparable to these of strong acids;this is  known as the levelling effect.

 

*    Amphiprotic solvents have both protophilic and protogenic properties.Examples are acetic acid and the alcohols. They are  dissociated to a slight extent. The dissociation of acetic acid, which is frequently used as a solvent for titration of basic  substances, is shown in the equation below:

CH3COOH H+ + CH3COO−

Here the acetic acid is functioning as an acid. If a very strong acid such as perchloric acid is dissolved in acetic acid, the lattercan function as a base and combine with protons  donated bythe perchloric acid to form protonated acetic acid,  an onium ion:

HClO4 H+ + ClO4−

CH3COOH + H+ CH3COOH2+ (onium ion)

Since the CH3COOH2+ ion readily donates itsproton to a base, a solution of perchloric acid

 

in glacial acetic acid  functions as a strongly acidic solution.

 

 

Titrants used in non aqueus titration


 Acidic titrants:

 

o Perchloric acid

 

o p- Toluenesulfonicacid,

 

o 2,4-Dinitrobenzenesulfonic acid

Basic titrants

 

o Tetrabutylammonium hydroxide

 

o Sodium acetate

 

o Potassium methoxide

 

o Sodium aminoethoxide


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