Titrations are also known as volumetric analysis.We repeat to determine the exact volume used by the titrant..
to find out when you have reached the end point
In a titration the pipette is used to transfer 25 cm3 (usually to ±0.05 cm3) of a solution into a conical flask. Another solution that reacts with the solution in the conical flask is carefully added from a burette until it has all exactly reacted. This is called the end point of the titration (or equivalence point of the reaction). There needs to be a way of knowing when the end point is reached. An indicator may be needed. Often a titration is repeated until successive titres are within 0.1 cm3.
types of conductometric titration: acid base titration complexometric titration replacement titration redox titration precipitation titration
Direct titration, Indirect titration, back titration, replacement titration and so on
over titration is when too much titrant is added to the analyte in a titration procedure.
to find out when you have reached the end point
In a titration the pipette is used to transfer 25 cm3 (usually to ±0.05 cm3) of a solution into a conical flask. Another solution that reacts with the solution in the conical flask is carefully added from a burette until it has all exactly reacted. This is called the end point of the titration (or equivalence point of the reaction). There needs to be a way of knowing when the end point is reached. An indicator may be needed. Often a titration is repeated until successive titres are within 0.1 cm3.
types of conductometric titration: acid base titration complexometric titration replacement titration redox titration precipitation titration
Direct titration, Indirect titration, back titration, replacement titration and so on
over titration is when too much titrant is added to the analyte in a titration procedure.
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
There are various types of titration. It is dependent on the conditions used and the reactants and desired products. Some of them are acid-base titration, redox titration, colorimetric titration and thermometric titration.
It depends on the titration.
1) The analyte is the substance in a titration whose concentration is unknown.
during a titration when a titrant completely furnished the sample then this is the end point of titration.
Double titration is a process were the first titration is used to standardize a titrant and the second titration is used to find the molarity of the unknow solution.
Titration is a chemical process.