Method for quantitative determination of hydrogen peroxide using potentiometric titration
First Claim
1. A method for determining the concentration of hydrogen peroxide in a solution, comprising the steps of:
- measuring a fixed volume of the solution;
diluting said fixed volume of the solution with an electrolyte solution;
measuring a fixed volume of the diluted solution;
depositing said fixed volume of the diluted solution into a titration cell containing a reference electrode and a working electrode;
connecting the reference electrode and working electrode to a voltmeter;
introducing a titrant into the titration cell at a fixed rate of volume;
stirring the titrant and the fixed volume of the diluted solution as the titrant is introduced into the titration cell;
measuring the cell potential of the titration cell across the reference electrode and working electrode;
periodically performing a calculation of the differential in cell potential expressed as dE/dV, where E is the cell potential and V is the volume of titrant introduced;
stopping the introduction of titrant into the titration cell when the differential in cell potential abruptly changes; and
calculating the concentration of hydrogen peroxide in the fixed volume of the solution based on the volume of titrant that was introduced into the titration cell.
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Abstract
An electrochemical potentiometric titration method that entails titration of a known volume of a catholyte containing an unknown amount of hydrogen peroxide in a titration cell having two electrodes, a platinum working electrode and a silver/silver chloride reference electrode. A known concentration of a titrant is added to the catholyte in the titration cell. Simultaneously, as the titrant is added the potential between the working electrode and the reference electrode is monitored. The point at which all of the hydrogen peroxide has been consumed is signaled when the cell potential changes abruptly. Since the concentration of the titrant is already known, the amount of titrant added (concentration multiplied by volume) is directly related to the amount of hydrogen peroxide consumed. The concentration of hydrogen peroxide is calculated from the volume of catholyte and the moles of hydrogen peroxide.
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Citations
5 Claims
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1. A method for determining the concentration of hydrogen peroxide in a solution, comprising the steps of:
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measuring a fixed volume of the solution; diluting said fixed volume of the solution with an electrolyte solution; measuring a fixed volume of the diluted solution; depositing said fixed volume of the diluted solution into a titration cell containing a reference electrode and a working electrode; connecting the reference electrode and working electrode to a voltmeter; introducing a titrant into the titration cell at a fixed rate of volume; stirring the titrant and the fixed volume of the diluted solution as the titrant is introduced into the titration cell; measuring the cell potential of the titration cell across the reference electrode and working electrode; periodically performing a calculation of the differential in cell potential expressed as dE/dV, where E is the cell potential and V is the volume of titrant introduced; stopping the introduction of titrant into the titration cell when the differential in cell potential abruptly changes; and calculating the concentration of hydrogen peroxide in the fixed volume of the solution based on the volume of titrant that was introduced into the titration cell. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3, 4, 5)
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Specification