Chemical Forums
Chemistry Forums for Students => Undergraduate General Chemistry Forum => Topic started by: Henderson-Hasselbalch on February 03, 2011, 05:03:38 AM
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My research for my internship involves hydroxylapatite and potential adsorption. Anywho, the other day I was making a diluted solution of KOH from a 0.05 mol L-1 stock solution. From my calculations, which where checked, the pH should've been around 9.5. However, when I stuck the electrode of the pH meter in the solution it read 7.4! The temperature was around 25oC and I was using MilliQ water. Why is this? Could CO2 being dissolved cause such a difference?
PS: I realise I could control the pH with a buffer but in the context of the experiment it would possibly cause interations.
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Have you calibrated the electrode? (http://www.ph-meter.info/pH-electrode-calibration)
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Have you calibrated the electrode? (http://www.ph-meter.info/pH-electrode-calibration)
I haven't but a PhD student did about a weak ago. I assume that's ok for a pH meter used only a few times each day? It gives pH values for my acidic solutions very close to my calculated pH.
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It can be not enough. And if you are measuring 0.05M base pH it should be calibrated using 7 & 10 buffers.
At the same time I did some rough estimates and it seems to me carbon dioxide can be able to lower pH by two units. Try to add a pinch of NaCl to your MilliQ water and measure its pH.
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I know from experience that milliQ water has a pH of about 5 due to dissolved CO2