Acid-Base Indicators For Use in Titration
Acid-Base Indicators For Use in Titration
Acid-Base Indicators For Use in Titration
Certain organic substances change colour in dilute solution when the hydronium ion
concentration reaches a particular value. For example, phenolphthalein is a colourless
substance in any aqueous solution with a hydronium ion concentration greater than
5.0 × 10−9 M (pH < 8.3). In more basic solutions where the hydronium ion concentration
is less than 5.0 × 10−9 M (pH > 8.3), it is red or pink. Substances such as
phenolphthalein, which can be used to determine the pH of a solution, are called
acid-base indicators. Acid-base indicators are either weak organic acids or weak
organic bases.
The equilibrium in a solution of the acid-base indicator methyl orange, a weak acid, can
be represented by an equation in which we use HIn as a simple representation for the
complex methyl orange molecule:
HIn(aq) +H2O(l) ⇌ H3O+(aq) +In−(aq) (17.3.1
red )
yellow
[H3O+][In−] −4
Ka = = 4.0×10 (17.3.2
[HIn] )
−
The anion of methyl orange, In , is yellow, and the non ionized form, HIn, is red. When
we add acid to a solution of methyl orange, the increased hydronium ion concentration
shifts the equilibrium toward the non ionized red form, in accordance with Le
Chatelier’s principle. If we add base, we shift the equilibrium towards the yellow form.
This behaviour is completely analogous to the action of buffers.
An indicator’s colour is the visible result of the ratio of the concentrations of the two
species In− and HIn. If most of the indicator (typically about 60−90% or more) is
present as In−, then we see the colour of the In− ion, which would be yellow for methyl
orange. If most is present as HIn, then we see the colour of the HIn molecule: red for
methyl orange. For methyl orange, we can rearrange the equation for Ka and write:
[In−] [substance with yellow colour] Ka [HIn] [substance with red colour]
[H3O+]
= =
(17.3.3)
This shows us how the ratio of varies with the concentration of hydronium ion.
The above expression describing the indicator equilibrium can be rearranged:
[H3O+]
[HIn]
(17.3.4)
=
Ka [In−]
log [H3O+]) = log( [HIn]) (17.3.5) Ka
[In−]
[In−]
log([H3O+])−log(Ka) = −log( ) (17.3.6)
[HIn]
−
[In ]
−pH+pKa = −log( ) (17.3.7)
[HIn]
(
In general, for titrations of strong acids with strong bases (and vice versa), any
indicator with a pK in between about 4.0 and 10.0 will do. For the titration of a weak
acid, however, the pH at the equivalence point is greater than 7.0, so an indicator such
as phenolphthalein or thymol blue, with pKin > 7.0, should be used. Conversely, for the
titration of a weak base, where the pH at the equivalence point is less than 7.0, an
indicator such as methyl red or bromocresol blue, with pKin < 7.0, should be used.
The existence of many different indicators with different colour s and pKin values also
provides a convenient way to estimate the pH of a solution without using an expensive
electronic pH meter and a fragile pH electrode. Paper or plastic strips impregnated with
combinations of indicators are used as “pH paper,” which allows you to estimate the
pH of a solution by simply dipping a piece of pH paper into it and comparing the
resulting colour with the standards printed on the container
Summary
Acid–base indicators are compounds that change colour at a particular pH. They are
typically weak acids or bases whose changes in colour correspond to deprotonation or
protonation of the indicator itself.
J&K Sainik School Manasbal
Chemistry Project
(PGT Chemistry)