Lecture 7
Lecture 7
Lecture 7
Potentiometric Measurements
Including:
a reference electrode, an indicator electrode, and a potentialmeasuring device
General Principles
A typical cell for potentiometric analysis:
Potentiometric Analysis
Reference electrode
A half-cell with an accurately known electrode potential, Eref, that
is independent of the concentration of the analyte or any other
ions in the solution
Always treated as the left-hand electrode
Indicator electrode
which is immersed in a solution of the analyte, develops a
potential, Eind, that depends on the activity of the analyte.
Is selective in its response
Salt bridge
Preventing components of the analyte solution from mixing with
those of the reference electrode
A potential develops across the liquid junctions at each end of
the salt bridge.
Potassium chloride is a nearly ideal electrolyte for the salt bridge
because the mobilities of the K+ion and the Cl ion are nearly
equal.
Reference Electrodes
Ideal reference electrode
has a potential that is accurately known, constant and
completely insensitive to the composition of the analyte solution.
Typical Commercial
Saturated Calomel Electrode
Reference Electrodes
Formal potentials
Liquid-Junction Potentials
Ex:
A liquid junction consisting of a 1 M HCl solution
that is in contact with a solution that is 0.01 M HCl
Both H+ and Cl- ions tend to diffuse across the inert
porous barrier
H+ ions diffuse more rapidly than Cl- ions, and a
separation of charge results
The potential difference resulting from this charge
separation is the junction potential
Indicator Electrodes
Ideal indicator electrode:
responds rapidly and reproducibly to changes
in the concentration of an analyte ion (or
groups of analyte ions).
Three types:
Metallic
electrodes of the first kind
electrodes of the second kind
inert redox electrodes
Membrane
Ion-sensitive field effect transistor
Or
Ex:
Platinum electrode immersed in a solution containing
cerium (III) and cerium (IV):
pH Meter
Whenever there is a charge imbalance
across any material, there is an electrical
potential across the material:
the concentration of protons inside the
membrane is constant, and the concentration
outside is determined by the concentration, or
activity, of the protons in the analyte solution.
This concentration difference produces the
potential difference that we measure with a
pH meter.
Cell Potentials
The potentials of the two reference electrodes
depend on the electrochemical characteristics of their respective
redox couples
Cell Potentials
4 potentials:
EAg,AgCl and ESCE, are reference electrode potentials that are
constant.
A 3rd potential is the junction potential Ej across the salt bridge
that separates the calomel electrode from the analyte solution.
The 4th and most important potential is the boundary potential,
Eb, which varies with the pH of the analyte solution.
Boundary Potential
The boundary potential is determined by potentials, E1
and E2, which appear at the two surfaces of the glass
membrane from the reactions:
Boundary Potential
The resulting difference in potential between the two
surfaces of the glass is the boundary potential, which is
related to the activities of hydrogen ion in each of the
solutions by the Nernst-like equation:
Describing Selectivity
The effect of an alkali metal ion on the potential
across a membrane can be accounted for by
inserting an additional term:
where kH,B is the selectivity coefficient for the
electrode.
Selectivity coefficients range from zero (no
interference) to values greater than unity.
If an electrode for ion A responds 20 times more
strongly to ion B than to ion A, kH,B = 20.
Liquid-membrane Electrode
The potential of liquid-membrane
electrodes develops across the interface
between the solution containing the
analyte and a liquid-ion exchanger that
selectively bonds with the analyte ion.
Liquid-membrane electrodes have been
developed for the direct potentiometric
measurement of numerous polyvalent cations
as well as certain anions.
Liquid-membrane Electrode
Internal solution/analyte solution separation
membrane:
the ion exchanger is dissolved in an immiscible
organic liquid that is forced by gravity into the pores of
a hydrophobic porous disk. This disk serves as the
membrane.
the Ion exchanger is immobilized in a tough PVC gel
cemented to the end of a tube that holds the internal
solution and reference electrode.
Membrane Potential
A potential develops across the membrane when the
extent of the ion exchanger dissociation at one surface
differs from that at the other surface.
The relation between the membrane potential and the
calcium ion activities:
Since a2 is a constant:
Crystalline-membrane Electrodes
Some solid membranes that are selective toward
anions in the same way that some glasses
respond to cations:
Membranes prepared from cast pellets of silver
halides are for the selective determination of chloride,
bromide, and iodide ions.
An electrode based on a polycrystalline Ag2S
membrane is for the determination of sulfide ion.
In both types, silver ions are sufficiently mobile to
conduct electricity through the solid medium.
Direct Potentiometry
Direct potentiometric measurements
provide a rapid and convenient method to
determine the activity of a variety of
cations and anions:
A comparison of the potential developed in a
cell containing the indicator electrode in the
analyte solution with its potential when
immersed in one or more standard solutions
of known analyte concentration.
Direct Potentiometry
The potential of the cell:
For the cation Xn+ at 25C, the electrode
response takes the general Nernstian form:
OR
where the potential Ecell becomes (0.4490 V)
Potentiometric Titrations
A potentiometric titration involves measurement
of the potential of a suitable indicator electrode
as a function of titrant volume.
The measurement is base on the titrant volume
that causes a rapid change in potential near the
equivalence point.
Potentiometric titrations provide data that are
more reliable than data from titrations that use
chemical indicators.
They are particularly useful with colored or turbid
solutions and for detecting the presence of
unsuspected species.
Potentiometric Titrations
Potentiometric titrations
are not dependent on
measuring absolute
values of Ecell.
Potentiometric titration
results depend most
heavily on having a titrant
of accurately known
concentration.
Complex-Formation Titrations
Both metallic and membrane electrodes
have been used to detect end points in
potentiometric titrations involving complex
formation:
Mercury electrodes are useful for EDTA
titrations of cations that form complexes that
are less stable than HgY2-
Neutralization Titrations
An approximate numerical value for the dissociation
constant of a weak acid or base can be estimated from
potentiometric titration curves.
At half-titration point:
Therefore:
EXAMPLE 21-2
To determine K1 and K2 for H3PO4 from titration data,
careful pH measurements are made after 0.5 and 1.5
mol of base are added for each mole of acid. It is then
assumed that the hydrogen ion activities computed from
these data are identical to the desired dissociation
constants. Calculate the relative error incurred by the
assumption if the ionic strength is 0.1 at the time of each
measurement.
Since
and
the activity coefficient for H3PO4 is ca. 1
the activity coefficient for H2PO4- is ca. 0.78
the activity coefficient for HPO42- is ca. 0.36
Therefore:
Potentiometric Determination of
Equilibrium Constants
Numerical values for solubility-product
constants, dissociation constants, and
formation constants are conveniently
evaluate through the measurement of cell
potentials.
EXAMPLE 21-3
Calculate the formation constant Kf for Ag(CN)2-:
if the cell
develops a potential of 0.625 V.
If
EXAMPLE 21-4
Calculate the dissociation constant KHP for the weak acid
HP if the cell:
develops a potential of 0.591 V.