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- Jul 16, 2009
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As we have established, chemistry makes my brain hurt.
Please correct me if I am wrong, as I am, not sure I am headed down the right path.
So with HCL, (M) Molarity and (N) Normality are the same?
So I can use simple math for dilution?
C1V1=C2V2
If I start with 1 M HCL and want 1000 mL of HCL at 0.1 M
1.0 M × V1 = 0.1 M × 1000 mL
Solve for V1
V1 = 0.1 M × 1000 mL / 1.0 M
SO
V1 = 100 mL of 1 M HCL
Equipment Needed
1000 mL Class A volumetric flask
100 mL Class A volumetric flask (or volumetric pipette)
Procedure
1 - Fill 100 mL flask to line (bottom of meniscus) with 1M HCL
2 - Add roughly 750 mL of lab grade distilled water to 1000 mL flask
3 - Slowly add the measured 100 mL of 1M HCL to the partially full 1000 mL flask
4 - Swirl to mix (or stopper and invert?)
5 - Fill 1000 mL flask to line.
6 - Stopper and invert 25 times (is that overkill?)
Accuracy
Assuming the beginning solution is actually 1 M and the water is lab grade, and both flasks are "Class A" and within their stated accuracy.
(Let's ignore me being able to hit the line precisely)
I read the tolerances of class A to be
100 mL Flask Tolerance: ±0.08 mL
1000 mL Flask Tolerance: ±0.30 mL
For the 100 ml flask that means an actual volume (excluding my precision) of
V1min = 100 mL − 0.08 mL = 99.92 mL
V1max = 100 mL + 0.08 mL = 100.08 mL
For the 1000 ml flask that means an actual final volume of (excluding my precision) of
V2min = 1000 mL − 0.30 mL = 999.7 mL
V2max = 1000 mL + 0.30 mL = 1000.3 mL
Calculation of final possible concentrations of my dilution using the equipment above and ignoring any precision error introduced by me:
Cfmin = 1.0 M × 99.92 mL / 1000.3 mL = 0.09992 M
Cfmax = 1.0 M × 100.08 mL / 999.7 mL = 0.10008 M
So a final acid concentration somewhere between 0.09992 M and 0.10008 M ??
In the real world (if I even remotely did that right) what would the final range (±) look like with the human element of precision added in reading the flask and/or other issues (a drop or two left in the 100 ml etc. ??
Sorry if this is basic or silly. In the end I want to know if reducing 1 M HCL to 0.1 M (N?) for use as a KH reagent (titration) is reasonable or will introduce too much error to be worth the trouble.
Please correct me if I am wrong, as I am, not sure I am headed down the right path.
So with HCL, (M) Molarity and (N) Normality are the same?
So I can use simple math for dilution?
C1V1=C2V2
If I start with 1 M HCL and want 1000 mL of HCL at 0.1 M
1.0 M × V1 = 0.1 M × 1000 mL
Solve for V1
V1 = 0.1 M × 1000 mL / 1.0 M
SO
V1 = 100 mL of 1 M HCL
Equipment Needed
1000 mL Class A volumetric flask
100 mL Class A volumetric flask (or volumetric pipette)
Procedure
1 - Fill 100 mL flask to line (bottom of meniscus) with 1M HCL
2 - Add roughly 750 mL of lab grade distilled water to 1000 mL flask
3 - Slowly add the measured 100 mL of 1M HCL to the partially full 1000 mL flask
4 - Swirl to mix (or stopper and invert?)
5 - Fill 1000 mL flask to line.
6 - Stopper and invert 25 times (is that overkill?)
Accuracy
Assuming the beginning solution is actually 1 M and the water is lab grade, and both flasks are "Class A" and within their stated accuracy.
(Let's ignore me being able to hit the line precisely)
I read the tolerances of class A to be
100 mL Flask Tolerance: ±0.08 mL
1000 mL Flask Tolerance: ±0.30 mL
For the 100 ml flask that means an actual volume (excluding my precision) of
V1min = 100 mL − 0.08 mL = 99.92 mL
V1max = 100 mL + 0.08 mL = 100.08 mL
For the 1000 ml flask that means an actual final volume of (excluding my precision) of
V2min = 1000 mL − 0.30 mL = 999.7 mL
V2max = 1000 mL + 0.30 mL = 1000.3 mL
Calculation of final possible concentrations of my dilution using the equipment above and ignoring any precision error introduced by me:
Cfmin = 1.0 M × 99.92 mL / 1000.3 mL = 0.09992 M
Cfmax = 1.0 M × 100.08 mL / 999.7 mL = 0.10008 M
So a final acid concentration somewhere between 0.09992 M and 0.10008 M ??
In the real world (if I even remotely did that right) what would the final range (±) look like with the human element of precision added in reading the flask and/or other issues (a drop or two left in the 100 ml etc. ??
Sorry if this is basic or silly. In the end I want to know if reducing 1 M HCL to 0.1 M (N?) for use as a KH reagent (titration) is reasonable or will introduce too much error to be worth the trouble.