A conical flask is used to hold chemicals and to make your chemical.
halo
that depends on the volume/size of the conical flask, the usual size would hold 250ml. theres some 1L, and even 50ml (possible smaller) conical flask.
An Erlenmeyer flask, commonly known as a conical flask or E-flask, is a widely used type oflaboratory flask which features a conical base and a cylindrical neck. They are usually marked on the side (graduated) to indicate the approximate volume of their contents. It is named after the German chemist Emil Erlenmeyer, who created it in 1861.
It prevent the solution from spelling
Yes. By adding water to rinse, you will be changing the concentration of the thing you are titrating, and so your calculation will be off. If you have material on the walls of the flask, just gently stir the flask and let the solution in the flask wash anything off the walls. I do not believe this is true. Once you add an amount of reactant into your flask adding more water will not change the number of moles of reactant that are present in the flask. The titrant will react in the mole ratio for that particular reaction so water doesn't play a role. You can rinse the flask and even use water to get part of a drop into your flask for a more accurate titration.
The correct spelling is conical flask. A conical flask is a type of flask that is used in laboratories. They have a conical body, flat bottom, and cylindrical neck.
A conical flask has a triangular, pyramidal shape when viewed from the side. At the top, it forms a small cylinder. | | / \ / \ / \ /______\
It is a conical flask
yes we use titrant in the conical flask ,this is because titrant is a solution we use in burrete for titration in this process we titrant the solution in the conical flask along with an indicator
A conical flask.
that depends on the volume/size of the conical flask, the usual size would hold 250ml. theres some 1L, and even 50ml (possible smaller) conical flask.
conical flask
It is the conical flask in which the solution from the burette flows into and which you add the indicator into.
Richard Erlenmeyer
conical flask