Chap21 Skoog Potentiometry
Chap21 Skoog Potentiometry
Chap21 Skoog Potentiometry
Potentiometry
1
Potentiometric methods
• Potentiometric methods of analysis are based on measuring the potential
of electrochemical cells without drawing appreciable currents.
• Applications:
Determine end points in titration
Determine ion concentrations with ion-selective membrane
electrodes
Measure pH
Determine thermodynamic equilibrium constants , such as Ka, Kb,
Ksp…
2
Potentiometric methods
General principles
• A typical cell for potentiometric analysis can be represented as:
3
Potentiometric methods
General principles
reference electrode | salt bridge | analyte solution | indicator electrode
Eref Ej Eind
• Reference electrode:
A half-cell having a known electrode potential (Eref) that remains constant at
constant temperature and is independent of the composition of the analyte
solution.
SHE can be reference electrode but seldom is used.
Always treated as the left-hand electrode.
• Indicator electrode:
Immersed in a solution of the analyte
has a potential (Eind) that depends on the activity of the analyte.
Usually are selective in response
• Salt Bridge:
Prevents components of the analyte solution from mixing with those of the
reference electrode
KCl is a nearly ideal electrolyte for the salt bridge because the mobilities of
the K+ and Cl- are nearly equal.
4
Reference Electrodes
• The ideal reference electrode has a potential that is accurately known,
constant, and completely insensitive to the composition of the analyte
solution.
• The electrode should be rugged, easy to assemble, and should maintain a
constant potential while passing minimal currents.
Eind E AgCl
0
/ Ag 0.0592 log aCl E AgCl / Ag 0.0592 pCl
0
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Indicator electrodes
12
Membrane Indicator Electrodes
• Membrane indicator electrodes are sometimes called p-ion electrodes because
the data obtained from them are usually presented as p-functions, such as pH,
pCa, or pNO3.
• Membrane electrodes are fundamentally different from metal electrodes both in
design and in principle.
• Example: The Glass Electrode for Measuring pH
1. A thin glass membrane separating two solutions with different [H+]
2. The sensitivity and selectivity of glass membrane toward H+ are well
understood.
13
pH Electrodes
• The internal reference electrode is not the pH-sensing element.
• The thin glass membrane bulb at the tip of the electrode that responds to pH.
• There is a charge imbalance across any material, there is an electrical potential
difference across the material.
• The concentration of protons inside the membrane is constant.
16
Membrane Potentials
• Four potentials develop in a cell when pH is being determined with a
glass electrode.
1. EAg,AgCl and ESCE, are reference electrode potentials that are constant.
2. Ej, the junction potential is across the salt bridge that separates the
calomel electrode from the analyte solution.
3. The fourth potential is called the boundary potential Eb that varies with
the pH of the analyte solution.
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Boundary Potentials
• The boundary potential is determined by potentials, E1 and E2, which appear at
the two surfaces of the glass membrane.
• The source of these two potentials is the charge that accumulates as a
consequence of the reactions: Glass1/Solution1: the interface
between the exterior of the
H+Gl- (s) H+ (aq) + Gl- (s)
glass and the analyte solution
H+Gl- (s) H+ (aq) + Gl- (s) Glass2/Solution2:the interface
between the internal solution and
the interior of the glass
• These two reactions cause the two glass surfaces to be negatively charged with
respect to the solutions with which are in contact.
• The boundary potential is related to the activities of hydrogen ions in the solutions
expressed by the Nernst-like equation:
Eb = E1 – E2 = 0.0592 log a1/a2
a1 is the activity of the analyte solution; a2 is that of the internal solution.
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Boundary Potentials
19
Boundary Potentials
• Potential profile across a glass membrane from the
analyte solution to the internal reference solution
is showing in figure.
• The potential profile is regardless of the absolute
potential inside the hygroscopic layers or the glass.
• The boundary potential is determined by the
difference in the potential on either side of the
glass membrane.
21
The Alkaline Error
• In basic solutions, glass electrodes respond to the concentration of both
hydrogen ion and alkali metal ions.
• The magnitude of the resulting alkaline error for four different glass
membranes is shown in the graph.
22
The Alkaline Error
In solution
In glass
23
Selectivity
• The effect of an alkali metal ion on the potential across a membrane can
be accounted for by inserting an additional term called the selectivity
coefficient (kH,B), which is a measure of the response of an ion-selective
electrode to other ions.
Eb = L’ + 0.0592 log (a1 + kH,Bb1)
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The Acid Error
• In solution of pH less than 0.5, the negative error (pHread – pHtrue)
indicates that pH readings tend to be too high.
• One source causes the acid error is a saturation effect that occurs when
all the surface sites of the glass are occupied with H+ ions.
• Under these conditions, the electrode no longer responds to further
increases in the H+ concentration and the pH readings are too high.
25
Glass Electrodes for Other Cations
• Glass compositions permit the determination of cations other than
H+.
• Incorporation of Al2O3 or B2O3 in the glass helps to eliminate the
alkaline error in glass electrodes.
• Glass electrodes that permit the direct potentiometric
measurement of such singly charged species as Na+, K+, NH4+, Rb+,
Cs+, Li+, and Ag+ have been developed.
• Glass electrodes for Na+, Li+, NH4+, and total conc. of univalent
cations are commercially available now.
26
Liquid-Membrane Electrodes
• 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.
27
Comparison of a liquid-membrane calcium ion
electrode with a glass pH electrode
• The active membrane
ingredient is an ion exchanger
that consists of a calcium
dialkyl phosphate that is
nearly insoluble in water.
• 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 that separates the
internal solution from the
analyte solution.
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Calcium Ion Electrode
• A dissociation equilibrium develops at each membrane interface:
[(RO)2POO]2Ca 2(RO)2POO- + Ca2+
R is a high-molecular mass aliphatic group.
• As with the glass electrode, a potential develops across the membrane when the
extent of dissociation of the ion exchanger dissociation at one surface differs from
that at the other surface.
• The relationship between the membrane potential and the calcium ion activities
of the internal and external solutions is given by
• a1 and a2 are activities of
0.0592 a
Eb E1 E 2 log 1 Ca2+ in the external analyte
2 a2 and internal standard
solutions
0.0592 0.0592
Eb N log a1 N pCa
2 2
N is a constant
• The sensitivity for Ca2+ is 50X to Mg2+ and 1000X than Na+ or K+.
• It has good performance between pH 5.5 and 11.
• At lower pH, H+ replaces some of the Ca2+ on the exchanger and cause bias. 29
Liquid-Membrane Electrodes
30
Liquid-Membrane Electrodes
31
Crystalline-Membrane Electrodes
• Some solid membranes are selective toward anions in the same way that
glasses respond to cations.
Membranes prepared from cast pellets of silver halides have been used
for selective determination of Cl-, Br-, and I-.
An electrode based on a polycrystalline Ag2S membrane is for the
determination of sulfide ion.
In both types of membranes, Ag+ ions are mobile to conduct electricity
through the solid medium.
32
Ion-Sensitive Field Effect Transistors (ISFETs)
• The field effect transistor, or the metal oxide field effect transistor
(MOSFET), is a tiny solid-state semiconductor device that is widely used in
computers and other electronic circuits as a switch to control current flow
in circuits.
• Its drawback is its pronounced sensitivity to ionic surface impurities.
33
Ion-Sensitive Field Effect Transistors (ISFETs)
• ISFETs offer significant advantages over membrane electrodes
including ruggedness, small size, inertness toward harsh
environments, rapid response, and low electrical impedance.
• ISFETs do not need hydration before use and can be stored
indefinitely in the dry state.
The last equilibrium causes the pH of the internal surface film to change.
This change is then detected by the internal glass/calomel electrode system. So
the overall process is:
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Gas-Sensing Probes
• aHCO3- is constant, so
• For a neutral species CO2, if we allow a1 to be the hydrogen ion activity of the internal
solution,
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Portable Instrumentation
38
Instruments for measuring cell potential
• Most cells containing a membrane electrode have very high electrical
resistance (108 ohms or higher).
• In order to measure potentials of such high-resistance circuits
accurately, it is necessary that the voltmeter have an electrical
resistance that is several orders of magnitude greater than the
resistance of the cell being measured.
• If the meter resistance is too low, current is drawn from the cell, which
has the effect of lowering its output potential, thus creating a negative
loading error.
• Numerous high-resistance, direct-
reading digital voltmeters with internal
resistance of > 1011 ohms.
• These meters are commonly called pH
meters but could more properly be
referred to as pIon meters or ion
meters.
39
Direct Potentiometry
• Direct potentiometric measurements provide a rapid and convenient
method for determining the activity of a variety of cations and anions.
• The technique requires only 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.
• If the response of the electrode is specific for the analyte, no preliminary
separation steps are required.
• Direct potentiometric measurements are also readily for continuous and
automatic recording of analytical data.
40
Direct Potentiometry
Equations Governing Direct Potentiometry
• For direct potentiometric measurements, the potential of a cell can then be
expressed in terms of the potentials developed by the indicator electrode,
the reference electrode, and a junction potential,
Ecell = Eind – Eref + Ej
• For the cation Xn+ at 25°C, the electrode response takes the general Nernstian
form: 0.0592 0.0592
E L
ind pX L log a X
n n
L: a constant for either metallic indicator electrodes and membrane
electrodes, ax is the activity of the cation
Ecell ( E j Eref L)
• Rearrange: pX log a X
0.0592 / 2
• Combined to give a new constant K:
( Ecell K ) n( Ecell K )
pX log a X
0.0592 / n 0.0592
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Direct Potentiometry
• For an anion An-:
( E cell K ) n( Ecell K )
pA
0.0592 / n 0.0592
• When the two equations are solved for Ecell, we find that for cations:
0.0592
Ecell K pX
n
• Thus, for a cation-selective electrode, an increase in pX results in a
decrease in Ecell.
• When a high-resistance voltmeter is connected to the cell (indicator
electrode attached to the positive terminal), the meter reading
decreases as pX increases.
0.0592
• For anions: Ecell K pA
n
42
Direct Potentiometry
The Electrode-Calibration Method
( Ecell K ) n( Ecell K ) ( E cell K ) n( Ecell K )
pX log a X pA
0.0592 / n 0.0592 0.0592 / n 0.0592
• The constant K is made up of several constants, such as the junction
potential. K has to be determined with a standard solution of analyte.
• The electrode-calibration method is also referred to as the method of
external standards.
• The electrode-calibration method offers the advantages of simplicity,
speed, and applicability to the continuous monitoring of pX or pA.
43
Direct Potentiometry
Inherent Error in the electrode-calibration procedure
• The magnitude of the error in analyte concentration can be estimated by
differentiating one equation while assuming Ecell constant.
( Ecell K ) n( Ecell K )
pX log a X
0.0592 / n 0.0592
dax da dK
differentiate log 10 e 0.434 x
ax ax 0.0592 / n
dax ndK
38.9ndK
ax 0.0257
• When dax and dK are replaced with finite increments and multiple by 100%,
the percent relative error = Da x
100 % 38.9nDK 100 %
ax
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Potentiometric pH Measurement with the Glass
Electrode
• The glass/calomel electrode system is a remarkably versatile tool for the
measurement of pH under many conditions.
• It can be used without interference in solutions containing strong
oxidants, strong reductants, proteins, and gases.
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Potentiometric pH Measurement with the Glass
Electrode
The Operational Definition of pH
•The operational definition of pH, endorsed by the National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) and IUPAC, is based on the direct calibration of the meter with
carefully prescribed standard buffers followed by potentiometric determination of the
pH of unknown solutions.
•When electrodes are immersed in a standard buffer: ES K
pH S
0.0592
EU K
•When electrodes are immersed in an unknown solution: pHU
0.0592
( EU ES )
•Therefore, the operational definition of pH is pHU pH S
0.0592
•The strength of the operational definition of pH provides a coherent scale for the
determination of acidity or alkalinity.
•The operational definition of pH does not yield the exact pH as defined by the
equation: pH log [ H ]
U H
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Potentiometric titrations
• In a potentiometric titration, we measure the potential of a suitable
indicator electrode as a function of titrant volume.
• 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.
• This characteristic makes the titration relatively
free from junction potential uncertainties.
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Detecting The End Point
• A direct plot of potential as a function of reagent volume
• The inflection point in the steeply rising portion of the curve and
take it as the end point.
Titration Curve
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Detecting The End Point
First-derivative curve
Second-derivative curve
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Neutralization Titrations
• Usually, the experimental curves are somewhat displaced from the theoretical
curves along the pH axis because concentrations rather than activities are used in
their derivation.
• Potentiometric neutralization titrations are quite useful for analyzing mixtures of
acids or polyprotic acids.
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• Any electrode system in which H+ are participants can be used to evaluate
dissociation constants for acids and bases.
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