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
types of conductometric titration: acid base titration complexometric titration replacement titration redox titration precipitation titration
Because the iodine is liberated, hence it is called as iodometric titration.
The equation of titration with methyl orange is C14H14N3NaO3S. Methyl orange is a pH indicator that is often used in titration, which is a laboratory method of quantitative chemical analysis.
It is helpfull for an accurate read-out of the volume scale.
Iodometry, also known as iodometric titration, is a method of volumetric chemical analysis, a redox titration where the appearance or disappearance of elementary iodine indicates the end point.
types of conductometric titration: acid base titration complexometric titration replacement titration redox titration precipitation titration
Because the iodine is liberated, hence it is called as iodometric titration.
The equation of titration with methyl orange is C14H14N3NaO3S. Methyl orange is a pH indicator that is often used in titration, which is a laboratory method of quantitative chemical analysis.
The purpose is to realize chemical analysis/experiments at microscale.
Complexometric titration is also known as chelatometry. It is a form of volumetric analysis in which the formation of a colored complex is used to indicate a titration's end point.
The pricipal use is in the volumetric titration - a method of quantitative chemical analysis.
It is helpfull for an accurate read-out of the volume scale.
Iodometry, also known as iodometric titration, is a method of volumetric chemical analysis, a redox titration where the appearance or disappearance of elementary iodine indicates the end point.
During a precipitation titration an insoluble precipitate is formed.Complexometric titration is a type of volumetry which use as titrants EDTA or other similar reagents.
need of pilot reading in volumetric analysis
No, they are not the same, but 1 is part of 2.Iodometric titration is just one of the (larger) group (or class) of oxidimetric titrations, which in turn is part of the much (larger) group (or class) of volumetric analysis method.
'Conductometric' IS a special case of volumetric analysis, it's the way of measuring the endpoint of titration. An other method is 'potentiometric' by measurement of pH.