The chemical process for back titration is to titrate the analyte past the original end point/equivalence point, and then BACK titrate the excess titrant to equivalence.
THE PROCESS IS CALLED STANDARDIZATION OR CALIBRATION. It's called titration
The most important is an adequate titrant necessary for a specific titration.
Corrosion is not so much a chemical property as it is a chemical process. Since it involves chemical reactions by which chemical compounds become different chemical compounds, that makes it a chemical rather than purely physical process.
If you think to titration this is the titrant.
I have read that it can be used while neutralising acids in machinery lubricants http://www.machinerylubrication.com/Read/1139/back-titration-oil-analysis.
Titration is a chemical process.
The answer is bromatometry.
the process goes on faster like in a chemical reaction
In fact, a back titration is carried out as in a very similar method to an ordinary titration. the only difference is in the context. Consider an unknown acid solution. Then a known amount of excess alkali was added to the solution and made them react. Then the process of finding the amount left from the alkali is known as the back titration.
Direct titration, Indirect titration, back titration, replacement titration and so on
Sorry, titration is a process and you cannot "buy" it.
Titration is a method of chemical analysis; for example: - volumetry - potentiometric titration - amperometric titration - radiometric titration - Karl Fisher titration - spectrophotometric titaration - viscosimetric titration and other methods
A back titration is a form of titraiton in which an excess of standard reagent is added and then the reverse of the titration is carried out.
A back titration is a form of titraiton in which an excess of standard reagent is added and then the reverse of the titration is carried out.
If you mean iodometry, it is the use of the chemical iodine in a process called titration. Titration is often used to determine the concentration of a chemical in a solution. A common use of iodometry was determination of salt concentration in salt water. It is not the most accurate or quickest way these days.
THE PROCESS IS CALLED STANDARDIZATION OR CALIBRATION. It's called titration
Titration is the process used to measure the concentration of a substance in solution.