Gran plot

A Gran plot (also known as Gran titration or the Gran method) is a common means of standardizing a titrate or titrant by estimating the equivalence volume or end point in a strong acid-strong base titration or in a potentiometric titration. Such plots have been also used to calibrate glass electrodes, to estimate the carbonate content of aqueous solutions, and to estimate the Ka values (acid dissociation constants) of weak acids and bases from titration data.

Gran plots use linear approximations of the a priori non-linear relationships between the measured quantity, pH or electromotive potential (emf), and the titrant volume. Other types of concentration measures, such as spectrophotometric absorbances or NMR chemical shifts, can in principle be similarly treated. These approximations are only valid near, but not at, the end point, and so the method differs from end point estimations by way of first- and second-derivative plots, which require data at the end point. Gran plots were originally devised for graphical determinations in pre-computer times, wherein an x-y plot on paper would be manually extrapolated to estimate the x-intercept. The graphing and visual estimation of the end point have been replaced by more accurate least-squares analyses since the advent of modern computers and enabling software packages, especially spreadsheet programs with built-in least-squares functionality.

Basis of the calculations

The Gran plot is based on the Nernst equation which can be written as

where E is a measured electrode potential, E0 is a standard electrode potential, s is the slope, ideally equal to RT/nF, and {H+} is the activity of the hydrogen ion. The expression rearranges to

depending on whether the electrode is calibrated in millivolts or pH. For convenience the concentration, [H+], is used in place of activity. In a titration of strong acid with strong alkali, the analytical concentration of the hydrogen ion is obtained from the initial concentration of acid, Ci and the amount of alkali added during titration.

where vi is the initial volume of solution, cOH is the concentration of alkali in the burette and v is the titre volume. Equating the two expressions for [H+] and simplifying, the following expression is obtained

A plot of against v will be a straight line. If E0 and s are known from electrode calibration, where the line crosses the x-axis indicates the volume at the equivalence point, . Alternatively, this plot can be used for electrode calibration by finding the values of E0 and s that give the best straight line.

Titrating strong acid with strong base

For a strong acid-strong base titration monitored by pH, we have at any i'th point in the titration

where Kw is the water autoprotolysis constant.

If titrating an acid of initial volume and concentration with base of concentration , then at any i'th point in the titration with titrant volume ,

At the equivalence point, the equivalence volume .

Thus,

The equivalence volume is used to compute whichever of or is unknown.

The pH meter is usually calibrated with buffer solutions at known pH values before starting the titration. The ionic strength can be kept constant by judicious choice of acid and base. For instance, HCl titrated with NaOH of approximately the same concentration will replace H+ with an ion (Na+) of the same charge at the same concentration, to keep the ionic strength fairly constant. Otherwise, a relatively high concentration of background electrolyte can be used, or the activity quotient can be computed.[1]

Titrating strong base with strong acid

Mirror-image plots are obtained if titrating the base with the acid, and the signs of the slopes are reversed.

Click on the image to view in full size.
Figure 1. Sample Gran plots using data from Butler (1998). Note that the filled circles indicate the data points included in the least-squares computations to give the fitted dashed lines.
Click on the image to view in full size.
Figure 2. Sample Gran plots using data from "an on-line source". Retrieved 2008-02-18.  Only the region near equivalence is shown, as data far from equivalence deviate strongly from linearity. Note that the filled circles indicate the data points included in the least-squares computations to give the fitted dashed lines.

Hence,

Figure 1 gives sample Gran plots of a strong base-strong acid titration.

Concentrations and Dissociation Constants of Weak Acids

The method can be used to estimate the dissociation constants of weak acids, as well as their concentrations (Gran, 1952). With an acid represented by HA, where

,

we have at any i'th point in the titration of a volume of acid at a concentration by base of concentration . In the linear regions away from equivalence,

  and
 

are valid approximations, whence

, or
or, because ,
.

A plot of versus will have a slope over the linear acidic region and an extrapolated x-intercept , from which either or can be computed.[1] The alkaline region is treated in the same manner as for a titration of strong acid. Figure 2 gives an example; in this example, the two x-intercepts differ by about 0.2 mL but this is a small discrepancy, given the large equivalence volume (0.5% error).

Similar equations can be written for the titration of a weak base by strong acid (Gran, 1952; Harris, 1998).

Carbonate content

Martell and Motekaitis (1992) use the most linear regions and exploit the difference in equivalence volumes between acid-side and base-side plots during an acid-base titration to estimate the adventitious CO2 content in the base solution. This is illustrated in the sample Gran plots of Figure 1. In that situation, the extra acid used to neutralize the carbonate, by double protonation, in volume of titrate is . In the opposite case of a titration of acid by base, the carbonate content is similarly computed from , where is the base-side equivalence volume (from Martell and Motekaitis).

When the total CO2 content is significant, as in natural waters and alkaline effluents, two or three inflections can be seen in the pH-volume curves owing to buffering by higher concentrations of bicarbonate and carbonate. As discussed by Stumm and Morgan (1981), the analysis of such waters can use up to six Gran plots from a single titration to estimate the multiple end points and measure the total alkalinity and the carbonate and/or bicarbonate contents.

Potentiometric monitoring of H+

To use potentiometric (e.m.f.) measurements in monitoring the concentration in place of readings, one can trivially set and apply the same equations as above, where is the offset correction , and is a slope correction (1/59.2 pH units/mV at 25°C), such that replaces .

Thus, as before for a titration of strong acid by strong base,

Analogous plots can be drawn using data from a titration of base by acid.

Electrode calibration

Note that the above analysis requires prior knowledge of and .

If a pH electrode is not well calibrated, an offset correction can be computed in situ from the acid-side Gran slope:

In the sample data illustrated in Figure 1, this offset correction was not insignificant, at -0.054 pH units.

The value of , however, may deviate from its theoretical value and can only be assessed by a proper calibration of the electrode. Calibration of an electrode is often performed using buffers of known pH, or by performing a titration of strong acid with strong base. In that case, a constant ionic strength can be maintained, and is known at all titration points if both and are known (and should be directly related to primary standards). For instance, Martell and Motekaitis (1992) calculated the pH value expected at the start of the titration, having earlier titrated the acid and base solutions against primary standards, then adjusted the pH electrode reading accordingly, but this does not afford a slope correction if one is needed.

Based on earlier work by McBryde (1969), Gans and O'Sullivan (2000) describe an iterative approach to arrive at both and values in the relation , from a titration of strong acid by strong base:

  1. is first estimated from the acidic data according to Rossotti and Rossotti (1965), and is initially taken to have its theoretical value;
  2. modified Gran function plots are drawn, using vs. on the acidic side of equivalence and vs. on the alkaline side, and the equivalence volumes and are computed therefrom, as before;
  3. as before, the difference in the equivalence volumes is used to compute the carbonate content but also to calculate an 'effective base concentration' for the alkaline side of equivalence;
  4. approximate values are computed on the acid side as and on the alkaline side as ;
  5. the initial definition is rewritten as , and the data are plotted against , using those values corresponding to pH values in the 2.5-4.5 and 10.7-11.5 ranges (the linear response range for a glass electrode that avoids variation of junction potentials and/or alkaline error at the pH extrema, and that additionally avoids measurement uncertainties near the equivalence point as well as computational errors from the neglect of on the acid side and the neglect of the carbonate/bicarbonate equilibrium on the alkaline side); a linear least-squares treatment provides as slope and as intercept;
  6. steps 2 and 3 are repeated with the new and values for greater precision in the equivalence volumes and the CO2 content.

The procedure could in principle be modified for titrations of base by acid. A computer program named GLEE (for GLass Electrode Evaluation) implements this approach on titrations of acid by base for electrode calibration. This program additionally can compute (by a separate, non-linear least-squares process) a 'correction' for the base concentration. An advantage of this method of electrode calibration is that it can be performed in the same medium of constant ionic strength which may later be used for the determination of equilibrium constants.
Note that the regular Gran functions will provide the required equivalence volumes and, as is initially set at its theoretical value, the initial estimate for in step 1 can be had from the slope of the regular acid-side Gran function as detailed earlier. Note too that this procedure computes the CO2 content and can indeed be combined with a complete standardization of the base, using the definition of to compute . Finally, the usable pH range could be extended by solving the quadratic for .

Potentiometric monitoring of other species

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Figure 3. Sample Gran plots using data from a titration of Cl by Ag+ monitored potentiometrically. The potentials were converted to [Ag+] values for plotting. Note that the filled circles indicate the data points included in the least-squares computations to give the fitted dashed lines.

Potentiometric data are also used to monitor species other than . When monitoring any species by potentiometry, one can apply the same formalism with . Thus, a titration of a solution of another species by species is analogous to a pH-monitored titration of base by acid, whence either or plotted versus will have an x-intercept . In the opposite titration of by , the equivalence volume will be . The significance of the slopes will depend on the interactions between the two species, whether associating in solution or precipitating together (Gran, 1952). Usually, the only result of interest is the equivalence point. However, the before-equivalence slope could in principle be used to assess the solubility product in the same way as can be determined from acid-base titrations, although other ion-pair association interactions may be occurring as well.[2]

To illustrate, consider a titration of Cl by Ag+ monitored potentiometrically:

Hence,

Figure 3 gives sample plots of potentiometric titration data.

Non-ideal behaviour

In any titration lacking buffering components, both before-equivalence and beyond-equivalence plots should ideally cross the x axis at the same point. Non-ideal behaviour can result from measurement errors (e.g. a poorly calibrated electrode, an insufficient equilibration time before recording the electrode reading, drifts in ionic strength), sampling errors (e.g. low data densities in the linear regions) or an incomplete chemical model (e.g. the presence of titratable impurities such as carbonate in the base, or incomplete precipitation in potentiometric titrations of dilute solutions, for which Gran et al. (1981) propose alternate approaches). Buffle et al. (1972) discuss a number of error sources.

Because the or terms in the Gran functions only asymptotically tend toward, and never reach, the x axis, curvature approaching the equivalence point is to be expected in all cases. However, there is disagreement among practitioners as to which data to plot, whether using only data on one side of equivalence or on both sides, and whether to select data nearest equivalence or in the most linear portions:[3][4] using the data nearest the equivalence point will enable the two x-intercepts to be more coincident with each other and to better coincide with estimates from derivative plots, while using acid-side data in an acid-base titration presumably minimizes interference from titratable (buffering) impurities, such as bicarbonate/carbonate in the base (see Carbonate content), and the effect of a drifting ionic strength. In the sample plots displayed in the Figures, the most linear regions (the data represented by filled circles) were selected for the least-squares computations of slopes and intercepts. Data selection is always subjective.

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 If the ionic strength is not constant, one can correct this expression for the changing activity quotient. See Harris (1998) or this "on-line document" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-02-17.
  2. Gran et al. (1981) give a more detailed treatment that takes into account other complex species in a titration of Cl by Ag+ (Ag2Cl+ and AgCl2, notably) and in other precipitation titrations, in order to compute equivalence volumes of dilute solutions, when precipitation is incomplete.
  3. "On-line document" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 17, 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-17.) and W. Wolbach of Depaul University ("On-line document" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-02-17.) recommend using last 10-20% volume data before the equivalence point, and the latter recognizes that base-side Gran plots from titrations of acid by base (i.e after the equivalence point) can be used to assess the CO2 content in the base. Similarly, W. E. Brewer and J. L. Ferry of the University of South Carolina recommend using those data within 10% before equivalence ("On-line document" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-02-17.). K. Kuwata of Macalester College recommends that students choose whichever data region gives the straightest line before equivalence ("On-line document" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-02-17.). D. L. Zellmer of the California State University at Fresno asks students to plot data from both sides of equivalence, using data furthest from equivalence, and to assess the errors in order to determine whether or not the two estimates of the equivalence volumes are significantly different (pH data: "On-line document". Retrieved 2008-02-17.; potentiometric titration of chloride ion with silver ion: "On-line document". Retrieved 2008-02-17.).
  4. Butler (1991) discusses the issue of data selection, and also examines interferences from titratable impurities such as borate and phosphate.
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