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Topic: EDTA Zinc Titration  (Read 3597 times)

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Offline chickapow

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EDTA Zinc Titration
« on: March 14, 2015, 03:18:08 PM »
Hi all,

I'm following http://www.titrations.info/EDTA-titration-zinc this method for a zinc titration I'm doing in the analysis of brass.

The starting solution is brass metal dissolved in nitric acid then diluted with water. Some potassium iodate is then added which precipitates the Cu2+ ions which are filtered off.

This leaves a solution with just zinc, which would mean I could titrate using the linked method.

However, for the zinc solution is a deep brown because of the iodine, making the indicator useless.

Is there any alternative method for removing the Cu2+ ions?

I'm open to any suggestion, however I must use a titrative method using the EBT indicator as that has been bought (at great expense specifically for this method).

Thanks in advance : )

Offline kriggy

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Re: EDTA Zinc Titration
« Reply #1 on: March 14, 2015, 03:54:49 PM »
Could you get the amount of Cu in your sample and then do the titration by EDTA without removing Cu ions and then substract the amount of Cu you know is in solution?

Online Borek

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Re: EDTA Zinc Titration
« Reply #2 on: March 14, 2015, 03:59:22 PM »
Some potassium iodate is then added

Iodate or iodide?

1. Why don't you reduce the iodine to iodide?

2. Why don't you precipitate CuSCN? (Requires NaHSO3 and NH4SCN, this is a basis of a gravimetric Cu determination).
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Offline chickapow

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Re: EDTA Zinc Titration
« Reply #3 on: March 14, 2015, 05:49:09 PM »
Could you get the amount of Cu in your sample and then do the titration by EDTA without removing Cu ions and then substract the amount of Cu you know is in solution?

The added complication is that it is a zinc titration as part of my investigation. I have already carried out a Cu quantitative analysis, and now I need to do a Zn titration.

Offline chickapow

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Re: EDTA Zinc Titration
« Reply #4 on: March 16, 2015, 10:00:08 AM »
Some potassium iodate is then added

Iodate or iodide?

1. Why don't you reduce the iodine to iodide?

2. Why don't you precipitate CuSCN? (Requires NaHSO3 and NH4SCN, this is a basis of a gravimetric Cu determination).

Does the CuSCN method produce a final colourless solution? Additionally, can KSCN be used to provide the SCN?

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Re: EDTA Zinc Titration
« Reply #5 on: March 16, 2015, 10:03:48 AM »
Does the CuSCN method produce a final colourless solution? Additionally, can KSCN be used to provide the SCN?

Nothing colored here so I guess yes, and no idea about KSCN - the recipe I have here call for NH4SCN, whether it is because it was cheaper or there are some side reactions involving potassium I don't know.
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