It is easier to answer this by using examples. Let us suppose we have 4g of NaOH in 100 mls of waste water (4%). Titrating with 1M HCl would require 100ml of titrant. That would thus mean we would need 1000ml of 0.1M HCl titrant run from a buret which is extremely impractical. The concentrations thus affect volumes and thus titration flask sizes etc. It also would affect the time taken and the practicality.
THE PROCESS IS CALLED STANDARDIZATION OR CALIBRATION. It's called titration
There are several types of titration techniques, including acid-base titration (determining the concentration of an acid or base), redox titration (determining the concentration of oxidizing or reducing agents), complexometric titration (determining the metal ion concentration using a complexing agent), and precipitation titration (determining the concentration of a dissolved substance by precipitating it).
the concentration of the titrant and the concentration of the titrate.
If you think to titration this is the titrant.
titration is the best method to determine the unknown concentration of the unknown. if ur known is a solid then you would have to used distilled water to ensure it is submerged before you titrate.
THE PROCESS IS CALLED STANDARDIZATION OR CALIBRATION. It's called titration
Determination of the concentration of a base by titration with acids or determination of the concentration of an acid by titration with bases. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid-base_titration)
Titration is the process used to measure the concentration of a substance in solution.
by titration
There are several types of titration techniques, including acid-base titration (determining the concentration of an acid or base), redox titration (determining the concentration of oxidizing or reducing agents), complexometric titration (determining the metal ion concentration using a complexing agent), and precipitation titration (determining the concentration of a dissolved substance by precipitating it).
Concentration of the liquid.
by weight
It should take just exactly twice the volume to reach the balance point.
titration is a method by which a solution of known concentration is used to determine the unknown concentration of a second solution. Titration methods are based on reactions that are completed quickly such as the mixing of an acid and base.
1) The analyte is the substance in a titration whose concentration is unknown.
The titrant is the solution involved or used in a titration to determine the concentration of an unknown solution.
titration with silver nitrate