I was practising titrations at school and decided to try with Ca(OH)2. It is obviously insoluble. So I was titrating it in a form of a thing
suspension, enough to make it opaque, but not enough to see any individual particles at the bottom easily. I used Congo Red as an indicator (has a
nice colour and transition pount between 3 and 5,2 pH). Although I was adding HCl
rather slowly and mixing quite vigorously, I didn't notice any particular transition point in colour of the mixture. What it did is it turned quite
gradualy from red to blue, with no particular sharp colour change at any point (as I've seen when titrating hydrochloric acid with NaOH, again using
Congo Red).
So, is it my fault, that I didn't notice a particular endpoint or could it be Ca(OH)2 that didn't quite disslve fast enough? At the end some red
Ca(OH)2 particles were still visible at the bottom of blue solution, so well... could be the second option.
Or was the stiring insufficient? I obviouslly did it manually, but quite well, especially that theese Erlenmeyer flask allow liquids to be strirred
very well without spilling. |