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TITRATION THEORY
As with Acid-Base titrations the potential changes dramatically at the equivalence point.
2.2.8 Karl Fischer Titrations
This method is based on a well-defined chemical reaction between water and the Karl Fischer
reagent. The chemistry provides excellent specificity for water determination. The method
can be used to determine free and bound water in a sample matrix. The Karl Fischer method
is widely considered to produce the most rapid, accurate and reproducible results and has
the largest detectable concentration range spanning 1 ppm to 100%.
The determination of water content is one of the most commonly practiced methods in
laboratories around the world. Knowledge of water content is critical to understanding chemical
and physical properties of materials and ascertaining product quality. Water content
determination is conducted on many sample types including pharmaceuticals and cosmetics,
foods and natural products, organic and inorganic compounds, chemicals, solvents and
gases, petroleum and plastic products as well as paints and adhesives. The KF method is
verifiable and can be fully documented. As a result, Karl Fischer titration is the standard
method for analysis of water in a multitude of samples as specified by numerous organizations
including the Association of Official Analytical Chemists, the United States and European
Pharmacopoeia, ASTM, American Petroleum Institute, British Standards and DIN.
2.3
Titrations According to The Titration Sequence
2.3.1 Back Titrations
Back titrations are generally used when a reaction is too slow to be directly accomplished
using a “direct” titration, where the reaction goes to completion within a few seconds. In a
back titration, a large excess of a reagent is added to the sample solution, helping a slow
reaction to go to completion. The unreacted, excess reagent is then titrated. The difference
in the total volume of the first reagent added and amount determined from the second
titration is the quantity of reagent required to complete the first reaction.
Figure 8
Summary of Contents for HI 902 Color
Page 6: ...6 QUICK START GUIDE TITRATOR CONNECTIONS Front View Rear View sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 18: ...18 QUICK START GUIDE QS 902C 10 10 sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 22: ...1 2 INTRODUCTION sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 24: ...1 2 INTRODUCTION sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 26: ...2 2 SETUP sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 36: ...3 2 USER INTERFACE sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 44: ...4 2 GENERAL OPTIONS sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 100: ...5 44 METHODS sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 102: ...6 2 TITRATION MODE sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 106: ...6 6 TITRATION MODE sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 138: ...8 2 AUXILIARY FUNCTIONS sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 148: ...9 2 MAINTENANCE PERIPHERALS sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 160: ...A1 2 APPENDIX 1 sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 164: ...A2 2 APPENDIX 2 sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 170: ...A3 2 APPENDIX 3 sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 174: ...A3 6 APPENDIX 3 sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 176: ...A4 2 APPENDIX 4 sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 184: ...A5 2 APPENDIX 5 sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 193: ...A5 11 APPENDIX 5 ...
Page 194: ...A5 12 APPENDIX 5 MAN902C 10 10 ...
Page 196: ...1 2 INTRODUCTION ...
Page 224: ...2 TITRATION THEORY sale ponpe com www ponpe com ...
Page 248: ...26 TITRATION THEORY Titr THEORY 901 902 04 10 ...