a. What is the molarity of the titrant? The chemist obtained a 3.150 g sample and dissolved it in distilled water to produce a 50.0 mL solution. An aliquot of 10.00 mL was obtained and diluted in a 100.0 mL volumetric flask. A 50.00-mL aliquot of the diluted sample was taken and it required 25.70 mL of titrant for the methyl orange endpoint, while another 50.00-mL aliquot required 15.00 mL for the phenolphthalein endpoint. b. What is/are the major component/s of the sample? NaOH, Na2CO3, and NaHCO3?
Mr. Clean recently bought a laboratory-grade sodium carbonate from a chemical company known as Brand X. He was supposed to use it in the production of detergents. Unfortunately, he was scammed by the company. He suspected that he purchased a crude sodium carbonate so he tasked the Quality Assurance Department to determine the components of the purchased chemical. The chemist assigned to analyze the sample used double indicator method.
For the standardization of HCl titrant, 0.1025 g Na2CO3 of 99.5% purity (FW: 106.00) required 8.20 mL of the titrant to reach the phenolphthalein endpoint.
FW: NaOH (40.00), NaHCO3 (84.01), Na2CO3 (106.00)
a. What is the molarity of the titrant?
The chemist obtained a 3.150 g sample and dissolved it in distilled water to produce a 50.0 mL solution. An aliquot of 10.00 mL was obtained and diluted in a 100.0 mL volumetric flask. A 50.00-mL aliquot of the diluted sample was taken and it required 25.70 mL of titrant for the methyl orange endpoint, while another 50.00-mL aliquot required 15.00 mL for the phenolphthalein endpoint.
b. What is/are the major component/s of the sample? NaOH, Na2CO3, and NaHCO3?
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