Experiment 11. Determination of available iodide by
Andrew's titration.
Theory
Andrew's titration
In experiment 9, potassium iodate, when used as an oxidising
agent was itself reduced to elemental iodine. However, if the
reagent is used in the presence of an excess of concentrated
hydrochloric acid, the reduction product is not iodine but iodine
monochloride, where iodine is formally in the +1 oxidation state.
IO3- + 6HCl + 4e- ---> ICl +
5Cl- + 3H2O
In this case, iodide ions serve as the reducing agent
thus:
I- ---> I+ + 2e-
Hence the overall reaction is as shown below, and the end point
may be readily detected by the disappearance of free iodine and
its replacement by the pale yellow colour of iodine
monochloride.
IO3- + 2I- + 6HCl ---> 3ICl
+ 3Cl- + 3H2O
Method
(Conc. HCL should be handled in the fume hood. Avoid
contact with skin!)
Either (i) weigh out accurately between 0.08 and 0.15 g of the
solid `I' into a 250 cm3 glass
stoppered bottle (clear glass), or (ii) pipette
10.00 cm3 of solution `I' into a 250
cm3 glass stoppered bottle. Add about 25
cm3 of concentrated hydrochloric acid (use a graduated
measuring cylinder) and 5 cm3 of carbon
tetrachloride.
If (i) is used shake well to dissolve the solid. Titrate the
test solution with your standard potassium iodate solution,
shaking the bottle frequently. Initially the lower (non-aqueous)
layer becomes deep violet due to the formation of iodine but this
becomes paler near the end point. When the violet colour is only
faint the addition should be made dropwise and the bottle
should be frequently shaken in order to concentrate the iodine in
the non-aqueous layer. The end point is the point when the violet
iodine colour just disappears. Repeat the titration using a
second sample.
Finally a `blank' titration must be made by placing in the
bottle hydrochloric acid and carbon tetrachloride only in
amounts, identical to the above procedure, and noting what
volume, if any, of the iodate is required to produce an end
point, i.e., to give firstly an iodine colour and then a
yellow/colourless non-aqueous layer.
1. Subtract the `blank' value, if any, from the titrant volumes
and from these corrected volumes calculate either:
(a) the percentage of iodine ions in the solid
OR
(b) the concentration (g /dm3 ) of iodide ions in the
solution.
2. If a solid was used, then that solid was the iodide of a
group one or group eleven metal, i.e, MI.
Use the percentage iodide obtained above to identify M.
The
worksheet for this experiment
is available as an Adobe PDF document.
The original Experiment probably dates back to the laboratory
manual devised by Dr W.G. Bartley but since then it has been revised over the
years by numerous members of staff at UWI.
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Created Oct 2002. Links checked and/or last
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