1. Principle:
CN- is titrated with standard silver nitrate to form the soluble cyanide complex, Ag(CN)2-. As soon as all CN- has be complexed and a small excess of Ag+ has been added, the excess Ag+ is detected by the silver-sensitive indicator, p-dimethylaminobenzal-rhodanine, which turns from a yellow to a salmon colour end-point.
2. Reagents:
2.1 Potassium cyanide (KCN), AR. Extremely toxic – read MSDS before handling.
2.2 Sodium hydroxide (NaOH), AR
2.3 Stock cyanide solution, ~1000 ppm: Dissolve 1.6 g NaOH and 2.51 g KCN in 1 L reagent grade water.
2.4 p-dimethylaminobenzal-rhodanine
2.5 Acetone, AR
2.6 Indicator solution: Dissolve 20 mg p-dimethylaminobenzal-rhodanine in 100 mL of acetone.
2.7 Standard AgNO3 solution; (see : Standardisation of Silver Nitrate)
3. Procedure:
To one 250 mL Erlenmeyer flask, add 20 mL of stock KCN solution plus approximately 100 mL reagent grade water. Add a couple of drops of rhodanine indicator; titrate with standard silver nitrate titrant to the first change in colour from a ‘canary’ yellow to a salmon hue. A blank must also be established containing the same amount of alkali and water. Record the results. Carry out standardisation in triplicate. Calculate normality of CN- as per section 5.
4. Frequency of Standardisation
Restandardise every week.
5. Calculation:
Where:
T = mL AgNO3 titrant
B = blank titre (mL)
N = Normality of AgNO3
V = Volume standard CN
6. Reference:
APHA 20th Edition: 4500 CN-, D. pp. 4-38-39.
Thursday 21 January 2016
Standardisation of Stock Cyanide Solution
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