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EXPERIMENT #1 - INTRODUCTION TO THE ANALYTICAL BALANCE AND VOLUMETRIC GLASSWARE, Cheat Sheet of Chemistry

This lab will introduce basic laboratory equipment and skills needed for accurate and precise quantitative analysis.

Typology: Cheat Sheet

2022/2023

Uploaded on 09/16/2023

jorcalvillo
jorcalvillo 🇺🇸

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Download EXPERIMENT #1 - INTRODUCTION TO THE ANALYTICAL BALANCE AND VOLUMETRIC GLASSWARE and more Cheat Sheet Chemistry in PDF only on Docsity! Vers 2015-01-29 12 Experiment 1 INTRODUCTION TO THE ANALYTICAL BALANCE AND VOLUMETRIC GLASSWARE 2 lab periods Reading: Chapter 2, Quantitative Chemical Analysis, 7th or 8th Edition, Daniel C. Harris and CHEM 253 Quantitative Analysis Laboratory Experiments, 7th Edition, pg 4-11. Objective This lab will introduce the basic laboratory equipment and skills needed for accurate and precise quantitative analysis. Schedule Lab 1 Practice using the analytical balance and clean your glassware. A brief soaking in warm detergent solution should be enough to remove grease and dirt. If not, consult your TA. Become familiar with your glassware and begin calibrating it. Lab 2 Calibrate your glassware. During this lab period you will need to check out one or more items from Lab Services. Sometimes long lines can develop at Lab Services, especially in the afternoon sections. If there is a long line, start working on the parts of the experiment you can do without the checked out equipment. Usually the lines are much shorter once the initial “rush” dies down. Use of the Analytical Balance The ability to determine masses accurately is fundamental not only to analytical chemistry but to all of modern science. All measurements that we will perform in this course relate either directly or indirectly to weighing using an electronic analytical balance. The analytical balances in Chem 253 can be used to obtain four or five digits to the right of the decimal point. They have a precision of ±0.1 mg. These are delicate and precise instruments, which, if kept scrupulously clean and handled correctly, will continue to yield reliable data during the course of their usage. It is important that you become well acquainted with your balance. You should be confident that the balance is working properly and that your technique is correct before you proceed with any experiment. You should also read the section in your text on the analytical balance (Section 2.3 in Quantitative Chemical Analysis, 8th Edition, pp. 31-34). 1. Introduction to the balance: Attend a demonstration by your instructor on how to operate the balance and how to handle objects for weighing. After this demonstration, familiarize yourself with the controls on the balance and learn to read the optical scale to the nearest 0.1 mg (0.0001 g). Zero the optical scale with the pan clean and empty. Report any defects or poorly functioning controls to your TA immediately; do not try to make any adjustments until you have received specific instructions. Check the level of the balance. If the balance is out of level, please report it to the TA. Do not try to adjust the level by yourself. The floor and pan of the balance should be scrupulously clean. The balance doors should be closed except when you are loading your sample. Vers 2015-01-29 13 A further note of caution is that all objects or samples to be weighed must be brought to thermal equilibrium with the room (ambient temperature) before a weighing can be attempted. If you are unsure whether your sample is at ambient temperature, put the sample on the balance and observe whether the reading changes over a two-minute period. Temperature gradients within the balance can cause convection currents and a hot sample will lead to buoyancy errors, both of which can degrade your results. 2. Weighing out samples: Weighing by difference is the most accurate method we can use to quantitatively determine the mass of a solid sample. This procedure involves repetitive weighings of a weighing bottle containing a quantity of solid reagent. As the solid is removed to another vessel, the mass of the weighing bottle plus contents decreases. Upon reweighing, a lower mass is found. The difference in the two masses represents the mass of solid reagent transferred to the vessel. Hence, the phrase "weighing by difference". In this experiment you will use common table salt (NaCl) to practice weighing by difference. The goal is to weigh out three 0.7 g aliquots of NaCl as accurately as possible. Practice weighing by difference 1. Place approximately 3 g of NaCl (plain table salt) in a clean, dry glass weighing boat. 3. Record the mass of the weighing boat in your notebook. 4. Remove the weighing boat and transfer some of the NaCl to the beaker or flask. 5. Replace the weighing boat on the balance pan and record the new mass. Subtract this new, smaller, mass from the previous mass. Your sample should weigh somewhere in the range of 0.6800 to 0.7200 g. Don’t worry if the mass is slightly over or under these values. You may find it hard at first to estimate the point at which you have transferred ~0.7 g into your flask or beaker. You might have to try the transfer several times until you get it right. If you overshoot, don’t transfer any reagent back into the weighing bottle. Simply discard the solid reagent in the proper manner (see the TA for instructions), rinse out the vessel, and begin the weighing and transfer process over again. Once you have an appropriate amount of reagent transferred, use this amount as a visual guide to estimate subsequent samples. 6. Repeat these steps for each of your three samples. Record your masses in your notebook as follows. Make sure to use proper mass units. Initial (larger) mass (g) - Final (smaller) mass (g) Difference (g) 7. Clean up your balance station. Calibration of Volumetric Glassware Quantitative analysis is a very precise science and can only be completed successfully with exact measurements and data. Glassware used in quantitative experiments is of the highest grade, but it is not perfect. Therefore, every piece of volumetric glassware must be calibrated in order to allow for the slight variations present in every piece of glassware. Vers 2015-01-29 16 Figure 1 How to use the calibration curve: The buret used to acquire the above data doesn’t really deliver the exact volume that we read from the buret. The true volume delivered (calculated from the mass) is consistently less than it should be. However, it is not convenient to always weigh out whatever analyte is being delivered from the buret. Therefore, we use the calibration curve to correct the volumes delivered from the buret. The tolerance of a Class A 50 ml buret is ±0.05 mL. If your buret is far out of this range, you’ll want to trade it in for a new one from Lab Services. Remember to calibrate your new buret, too. How to apply the correction: Amparo used the above buret to deliver 30.21 mL of a solution. She calculates the true volume delivered in the following way: volume read from buret + correction factor at a particular volume = corrected volume. 30.21 mL + -0.08 mL = 30.13 mL The corrected volume is 30.13 mL. This is the value Amparo will use in her calculations. Always use the calibration curve when you use your buret. Be careful when acquiring the data for your calibration curve. Make sure you read the buret carefully. Calibration of 5, 10 and 25 mL pipets. Calibrate your pipets in the same way as for the buret. Make three separate measurements for each pipet. Calculate the average and the standard deviation for your data from the averages. Calculate the true volume delivered from the pipet from the mass of the water, as you did in the buret calibration procedure. Calculate a correction factor for each pipet. Calibration of your 50 and 100 mL volumetric flasks. Calibrate your 50 and 100 mL volumetric flasks in the following way: Place the empty volumetric flask on the top-loading balance and write down the weight of the flask. Remove the flask from the balance. Then, carefully add DI water just until the bottom of the meniscus rests on the top of the mark on the neck of the flask. Reweigh. Discard the water and refill the flask. Repeat three times. Calculate the mean and standard deviation, the true volume, and the correction factor. Vers 2015-01-29 17 Table 1.2 Density of water as a function of temperature T, °C Density g/mL T, °C Density g/mL T, °C Density g/mL T, °C Density g/mL 19.0 0.99842 21.0 0.99800 23.0 0.99755 25.0 0.99705 19.1 0.99840 21.1 0.99798 23.1 0.99752 25.1 0.99703 19.2 0.99838 21.2 0.99796 23.2 0.99750 25.2 0.99700 19.3 0.99836 21.3 0.99794 23.3 0.99748 25.3 0.99698 19.4 0.99834 21.4 0.99792 23.4 0.99745 25.4 0.99695 19.5 0.99832 21.5 0.99789 23.5 0.99743 25.5 0.99692 19.6 0.99830 21.6 0.99787 23.6 0.99740 25.6 0.99690 19.7 0.99828 21.7 0.99785 23.7 0.99738 25.7 0.99687 19.8 0.99826 21.8 0.99783 23.8 0.99735 25.8 0.99684 19.9 0.99823 21.9 0.99780 23.9 0.99733 25.9 0.99682 20.0 0.99821 22.0 0.99778 24.0 0.99731 26.0 0.99679 20.1 0.99819 22.1 0.99776 24.1 0.99728 20.2 0.99817 22.2 0.99773 24.2 0.99726 20.3 0.99815 22.3 0.99771 24.3 0.99723 20.4 0.99813 22.4 0.99769 24.4 0.99721 20.5 0.99811 22.5 0.99767 24.5 0.99718 20.6 0.99809 22.6 0.99764 24.6 0.99716 20.7 0.99807 22.7 0.99762 24.7 0.99713 20.8 0.99805 22.8 0.99760 24.8 0.99710 20.9 0.99802 22.9 0.99757 24.9 0.99708 Vers 2015-01-29 18 Report Sheet Experiment 1 Name/Date ________________________ Calibration of Volumetric Glassware Experimental Purpose Data and Calculations Weighing by difference Mass of Weigh boat___________________ Measurement 1 Measurement 2 Measurement 3 Initial Mass (g) Final Mass (g) Difference (g) Calibration of a 50 mL buret (MAKE SURE YOU ARE READING THE BURET BASED ON THE CORRECT SIGNIFICANT FIGURES!) 10 mL 20 mL 30 ml 40 mL 50 mL Mass of the bottle (g) Mass of the bottle plus water (g) Mass of water (g) Final Reading, buret (mL) Initial reading, buret (mL) Volume delivered, buret (mL) Total volume delivered, buret (mL) 11.46 21.58 10.12 10.3 0.2 10.1 10.1 11.46 11.46 11.46 11.46 41.05 60.79 29.59 49.33 31.22 19.76 50.98 30.5 10.3 20.22 20.22 9.92 10.28 19.93 30.21 39.52 30.5 50.7240.57 10.07 40.57 10.15 40.28 50.43 4.01 3.31 3.31 2.6 0.70 0.71 4.01 0.69 4.7 24.5Water temperature:___________________ Water Density:______________________0.99718 g/ml
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