Applications of
Oxidation/Reduction Titrations
Lecture 6
Pretreatmentauxiliary oxidizing/reducing reagent
Ex:
when a sample containing iron is dissolved, the
resulting solution usually contains a mixture of iron(II)
and iron(III) ions
We must first treat the sample solution with an
auxiliary reducing reagent to convert all of the iron to
iron(II)
To be a preoxidant or a prereductant:
a reagent must react quantitatively with the analyte
reagent excess must be easily removable
Auxiliary Reducing Reagents
A number of metals are good prereducing
agents:
Ex: Zn, Al, Cd, Pb, Ni, Cu, Au(with Cl-) and etc.
Sticks or coils of the metal can be immersed directly
in the analyte solution.
After reduction is judged complete, the solid is
removed
The analyte solution must be filtered to remove
granular/powdered forms of the metals
Auxiliary Oxidizing Reagents
Sodium bismuthate is a powerful oxidizing agent
capable, for example, of converting
manganese(II) quantitatively to permanganate
ion
Oxidations are performed by suspending the
bismuthate in the analyte solution and boiling for
a brief period
The unused reagent is then removed by filtration
Other Oxidizing Agents
Ammonium peroxydisulfate, (NH4)2S2O8
In acidic solution, it converts chromium(III) to dichromate,
excess reagent removal by boiling
Peroxide
Peroxide is a convenient oxidizing agent. Either a solid
sodium salt or a dilute solution of the acid
excess reagent removal by boiling
Applying Standard Reducing Agents
Since standard solutions of most
reductants tent to react with atmospheric
oxygen:
reductants are seldom used for the direct
titration of oxidizing analytes
indirect methods are used instead
Two common reductants:
Iron(II) ions
Thiosulfate ions (S2O32-)
Iron(II) Solutions
Easily prepared from
Iron(II) ammonium sulfate, Fe(NH4)2(SO4)26H2O, or
Related iron(II) ethylenediamine sulfate, FeC2H4(NH
3)2(SO4)24H2O.
Air oxidation prevention
Air oxidation takes place rapidly in neutral solutions but is
inhibited in the presence of acids.
the most stable preparations is about 0.5 M in H2SO4.
Excess iron(II) titration
by potassium dichromate or cerium (IV)
Application:
Organic peroxide, hydroxylamine, chromium(VI), cerium (IV),
molybdenum (VI), and nitrate, chlorate, perchlorate ions
Sodium Thiosulfate
Thiosulfate ion (S2O32-) is a moderately strong reducing
agent that has been widely used to determine oxidizing
agents by an indirect procedure:
Adding an unmeasured excess of potassium iodide (KI) to a
slightly acidic solution (pH < 7)of the analyte.
Reduction of the analyte produces a stoichiometrically equivalent
amount of iodine.
The liberated iodine is then titrated with sodium thiosulfate,
Na2S2O3 (one of the few reducing agents that is stable toward air
oxidation).
Ex:
Standardizing Thiosulfate
Solutions
Potassium iodate is an excellent primary
standard for thiosulfate solutions:
Weighted amount of primary-standard grade
reagent are dissolved in water containing an
excess of potassium iodide
Acidified the mixture with a strong acid:
The liberated iodine is titrated with thiosulfate
solution:
EXAMPLE 20-1
A solution of sodium thiosulfate was standardized by
dissolving 0.1210 g KIO3 (214.00 g/mol) in water, adding
a large excess of KI, and acidifying with HCl. The
liberated iodine required 41.64 mL of the thiosulfate
solution to decolorize the blue starch/iodine complex.
Calculate the molarity of the Na2S2O3.
Applications of Sodium
Thiosulfate Solutions
Applying Standard Oxidizing
Agents
The choice among the most widely used
oxidizing reagents:
The strength of the analyte as a reducing
agent
The rate of reaction between oxidant and
analyte
The stability of the standard oxidant solutions
The cost
The availability of a satisfactory indicator
5 most widely used volumetric oxidizing reagents
Strong Oxidants - Potassium
Permanganate and Cerium(IV)
Half-reactions are
For permanganate ion
occurs only in solutions that are 0.1M or greater in strong acid
in less acidic media, the product may be Mn(III), Mn(IV), or
Mn(VI), depending on conditions
For cerium (IV)
In 1M sulfuric acid, formal potential is 1.44V
In 1M perchloric acid and 1M nitric acid, the potentials are 1.7V
and 1.61V, respectively. Solutions of cerium (IV) are found of
limited applications here.
Comparing the Two Reagents
In sulfuric acid
Solutions of cerium(IV) are stable indefinitely
permanganate solutions decompose slowly
In hydrochloric acid
cerium(IV) solutions in sulfuric acid do not oxidize
chloride ion and can be used to titrate hydrochloric
acid solutions of analytes
permanganate ion cannot be used with hydrochloric
acid solutions of analytes
Cerium(IV) is that a primary-standard grade salt
of the reagent is available
However, the popularity of permanganate
solutions is their modest cost
Detecting the End Points
Potassium permanganate solution is intense purple color,
which is sufficient to serve as an indicator for most
titrations.
The permanganate end point is not permanent because excess
permanganate ions react slowly (slow that the end point fades
only gradually over a period of perhaps 30 seconds) with the
relatively large concentration of manganese(II) ions
Solutions of cerium(IV) are yellow-orange, but the color
is not intense enough to act as an indicator in titration.
The most widely used indicator with standard solutions of cerium
(IV) is the iron(II) complex of 1,10-phenanthroline
The Preparation and Stability of
Standard Solutions
Aqueous solutions of permanganate are not
entirely stable:
This reaction is catalyzed by light, heat, acids, bases,
manganese(II), and manganese dioxide.
Removal of manganese dioxide by filtration(not paper
filtering!!) before standardization markedly improves
the stability of standard permanganate solutions
Standardized permanganate solutions should be
stored in the dark.
Solutions containing excess standard permanganate
should never be heated
EXAMPLE 20-2
Describe how you would prepare 2.0 L of an
approximately 0.010 M solution of KMnO4
(158.03 g/mol).
Dissolve about 3.2 g of KMnO4 in a little water
Add water to bring the volume to about 2.0 L
Heat the solution to boiling for a brief period, and let
stand until it is cool.
Filter through a glass-filtering crucible and store in a
clean dark bottle
Solutions of cerium (IV) preparation
The reagent is dissolved in a solution that is at least
0.1M in sulfuric acid to prevent the precipitation of basic
salts
Sulfuric acid solutions of cerium(IV) are remarkably
stable and can be stored for months or heated at 100C
for prolonged periods without a change in concentration
Standardizing Permanganate and
Ce(IV) Solutions
Sodium oxalate is widely used for standardization:
Reaction with permanganate:
The reaction is complex and proceeds slowly even at
elevated temperature unless manganese(II) is present
as a catalyst (autocatalysis)
Reaction with Cerium(IV):
standardizations against sodium oxalate are usually
performed at 50C in a hydrochloric acid solution
containing iodine monochloride as a catalyst
EXAMPLE 20-3
You wish to standardize the solution in Example 20-2
against primary standard Na2C2O4 (134.00 g/mol). If you
want to use between 30 and 45 mL of the reagent for the
standardization, what range of masses of the primary
standard should you weigh out?
For a 30-mL titration:
For a 45-mL titration:
should weigh 0.10- to 0.15-g samples of the primary standard
EXAMPLE 20-4
A 0.1278-g sample of primary-standard Na2C2O4
required exactly 33.31 mL of the permanganate
solution in Example 20-2 to reach the end point.
What was the molarity of the KMnO4 reagent?
Using Potassium Permanganate
and Cerium(IV) Solutions
EXAMPLE 20-5
Aqueous solutions containing approximately 3% (w/w) H2O2 are sold
in drug stores as disinfectants. Propose a method for determining
the peroxide content of such preparation using the standard solution
described in Examples 20-3 and 20-4. Assume that you wish to use
between 30 and 45 mL of the reagent for a titration.
The reaction is
The amounts of KMnO4 in 35 to 45 mL of the reagent are:
The amounts of H2O2 consumed
or
Samples should weigh
between 1.1 and 1.5 g.
These should be
diluted to perhaps 75
to 100 mL with water
and made slightly
acidic with dilute
H2SO4 before titration
Potassium Dichromate
Dichromate ion has analytical applications:
generally carried out in solutions about 1M in HCl or
H2SO4 (half reaction about 1.0 to 1.1V)
indefinitely stable
can be boiled without decomposition
do not react with hydrochloric acid
modest cost
Disadvantage:
Lower electrode potential when comparing to
cerium(IV) and permanganate ion
Preparing Dichromate Solutions
For most purposes:
reagent-grade potassium dichromate solid is
dried at 150C to 200C before being weighed.
Indicator:
Diphenylamine sulfonic acid is an excellent
indicator for titration.
The oxidized form of diphenylamine sulfonic
acid is violet, and its reduced form is
essentially colorless
EXAMPLE 20-6
A 5.00-mL sample of brandy was diluted to 1.000 L in a
volumetric flask. The ethanol (C2H5OH) in a 25.00-mL
aliquot of the diluted solution was distilled into 50.00 mL
of 0.02000 M K2Cr2O7 and oxidized to acetic acid with
heating. The reaction is
After cooling, 20.00 mL of 0.1253 M Fe2+ was pipetted
into the flask. The excess Fe2+ was then titrated with
7.46 mL of the standard K2Cr2O7 to a diphenylamine
sulfonic acid end point. Calculate the percent (w/v)
C2H5OH (46.07 g/mol) in the brandy.
Total amount K2Cr2O7:
Amount K2Cr2O7 consumed by Fe2+:
Amount K2Cr2O7 consumed by C2H5OH:
=(1.1492 0.41767) mmol K2Cr2O7 = 0.73153 mmol K2Cr2O7
Mass of C2H5OH:
Iodine
Iodine is a weak oxidizing agent used primarily for the
determination of strong reductants:
where I3- is the triiodide ion.
Low stability
Because of the smaller electrode potential, iodine
solutions have relatively limited application.
The low potential, however, has important advantage of
A degree of selectivity that makes possible the determination of
strong reducing agents in the presence of weak ones.
iodine is the availability of a sensitive and reversible indicator for
the titrations.
Properties of Iodine Solutions
Not very soluble in water (0.001 M). Hence,
iodine is ordinarily dissolved in moderately
concentrated solutions of potassium iodide.
Lack stability because
The volatility of the solute
Losses of iodine from an open vessel occur in a short time
Iodine slowly attacks most organic materials
Air oxidation of iodide:
Use Iodine as an Oxidizing Agent
Potassium Bromate as a Source of
Bromine
Primary-standard potassium bromate is
available from commercial sources and can be
used directly to prepare standard solutions that
are stable indefinitely.
Not frequently used for direct titration
Convenient and widely used stable source of bromine:
The primary use of standard potassium bromate is
the determination of organic compounds that react
with bromine.
Bromine for
Substitution Reactions
Addition reactions
EXAMPLE 20-7
Determining Water with the Karl
Fischer Reagent
Karl Fischer titration:
a procedure for the determination of water in
various types of solids and organic liquids:
The stoichiometry can vary from 2:1 to 1:1
depending on the presence of acids and
bases in the solution
Determining Water with the Karl
Fischer Reagent
I2 and SO2 react in the presence of pyridine and water to
form pyridinium sulfite and pyridinium iodide:
where I2, SO2, and SO3 are shown as complexed by the pyridine.
The pyridinium sulfite can also consume water
(1) undesirable because it is not as specific for water
(2) can be prevent by having a large excess of methanol
The stoichiometry is one mole of I2 per mole of H2O
present
Pyridine-free reagents
Pyridine has objectionable odor.
Pyridine-free reagents are commercially available:
The stoichiometry is again one mole of I2 per mole of
H2O present