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Alkalinity of Bleach (Nacio Solution) : Procedure

This document describes a method for determining the alkalinity of bleach solutions through acid-base titration. The method involves titrating the basic components in bleach such as NaOH with a strong acid, using a pH electrode to detect the endpoint. Hydrogen peroxide is first added to reduce chlorine ions, then the sample is titrated against hydrochloric acid. The volume of acid used corresponds to the concentration of NaOH in the sample, which can be calculated using the provided formula. The method is suitable for bleach solutions with 7-20 g/L NaOH concentration.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
107 views2 pages

Alkalinity of Bleach (Nacio Solution) : Procedure

This document describes a method for determining the alkalinity of bleach solutions through acid-base titration. The method involves titrating the basic components in bleach such as NaOH with a strong acid, using a pH electrode to detect the endpoint. Hydrogen peroxide is first added to reduce chlorine ions, then the sample is titrated against hydrochloric acid. The volume of acid used corresponds to the concentration of NaOH in the sample, which can be calculated using the provided formula. The method is suitable for bleach solutions with 7-20 g/L NaOH concentration.

Uploaded by

budinganjuk
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Introduction

A bleach solution contains mainly NaClO plus basic


products such as NaOH and Na
2
CO
3
. The concentration
of basic products is generally expressed as NaOH
concentration, which is around 8 g/l NaOH, i.e. 0.2N
concentration. The alkalinity determination uses an
acid/base titration.
Principle
The OH
-
content is simply determined by an acid/base
titration using a 0.1 eq/l strong acid as titrant.
Depending on the bleach solution, the titration curve
generally shows 2 inflections. The most common
method involves a titration of all the basic functions by
a predetermined end point titration at pH 4.00. Before
this titration, it is necessary to reduce the ClO-ions
present in the solution.
Electrodes and reagents
pHC2011-8 Combined pH Electrode (part no. E16M317)
H
2
O
2
30% (volume)
Hydrochloric acid 0.1 eq/l (or 0.1 mol/l)
Slowly add 8.3 ml of concentrated hydrochloric acid to
500 ml of distilled water and dilute to exactly 1000 ml.
Calibrate the titrant versus Na
2
B
4
O
7
, 10 H
2
O (sodium
borate) as standard.
(See separate application note)
Distilled water
IUPAC Series pH standards
pH 4.005 (part no. S11M002) and pH 10.012 (part no.
S11M007)
End Point titration settings
Burette volume: 25 ml
Stirring speed: 400 rpm
Working mode: pH
Number of end points: 1
End point: 4.00 pH
Stirring delay: 45 seconds
Minimum speed: 0.2 ml/min
Maximum speed: 8.0 ml/min
Proportional band: 3.00 pH
End point delay: 5 seconds
Sample unit: ml
Sample amount: 5
Titration: Decreasing pH
Result: g/l
Procedure
Calibrate the electrode using the two IUPAC standards
Pipette 5 ml of sample
Always dilute the sample with the same volume of
distilled water (max. 50 ml)
Slowly add 5 ml of H
2
O
2
for 5 ml of sample
Dip electrode and delivery tip in the solution
Start method by pressing the RUN key
Results
Expressed as NaOH content (MW = 40 g/mol) in g/l
As 1 molecule of titrant reacts with 1 molecule of
NaOH
R(NaOH) = V(titr) * C(titr) * 40 / V(smp)
-V(titr) = total volume of titrant to reach the end point
in ml
-V(smp) = sample amount
-C(titr) = exact concentration of the titrant in eq/l
For a result in g/l
Enter
The sample amount in the SAMPLE screen
The titrant concentration in the TITRANT screen
1 Titrant and 1 Sample in the COEFFICIENTS display
40 for NaOH molecular weight
The Titration Manager gives a result according to the
above formula.
For a result as a %
As the Titration Manager cannot give a result in % if
the sample unit is a volumetric unit, you can use the
equation feature:
Equation number: 1
Equation result: % NaOH
Equation formula: R1 / 10
R1 is the titration result calculated in g/l.
5 determinations on a commercial concentrated bleach
Mean (as NaOH): 7.25 g/l
Standard deviation: 0.07 g/l
Rel. standard deviation: 1%
Alkalinity of Bleach (NaCIO Solution)
Working Range
Results are expressed in g/l of NaOH (MW = 40 g/mol)
1 ml of HCl 0.1 eq/l represents 4 mg of NaOH or, with a
5 ml sample volume a NaOH content corresponding to
0.8 g/l
The working range can be calculated as the following
formula:
Result (in g/l) = V(titr in ml) * 0.8 * 1000 / V(smp)
Using the conditions given in this application note (5
ml sample and a 25 ml burette for titrant), it is possible
to obtain results between 7 g/l (for 35% capacity of the
burette) and 20 g/l (total capacity of the burette) with
the best possible accuracy and reproducibility.
Notes
Addition of H
2
O
2
is necessary to reduce the ClO-ion to
Cl- before running the alkalinity titration.

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