Introduction
Iodometric titrations involve the use of iodine (I₂) as the analyte and sodium thiosulfate (Na₂S₂O₃) as the titrant. These titrations are used to determine the concentration of oxidizing agents like copper(II) ions or potassium iodate by indirect measurement through iodine liberation.
🔹 Principle of the Titration
Iodine (I₂) reacts with thiosulfate (S₂O₃²⁻), which reduces it to iodide ions (I⁻), while itself is oxidized to tetrathionate (S₄O₆²⁻).
Balanced Equation:
🔹 Common Titration Types
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Direct I₂ vs S₂O₃²⁻
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Iodine solution is titrated directly with sodium thiosulfate.
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Indirect (Back Titration):
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An oxidizing agent (e.g., KIO₃ or Cu²⁺) liberates iodine from iodide in acidic conditions, then I₂ is titrated with thiosulfate.
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Reaction example (KIO₃ in acid):
🔹 Apparatus and Chemicals
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Burette, pipette, conical flask
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Sodium thiosulfate (in burette)
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Liberated iodine (in flask)
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Potassium iodide (KI)
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Dilute H₂SO₄ or HCl
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Starch indicator
🔹 Procedure
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Prepare a solution that contains liberated iodine (I₂)
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Fill burette with standard sodium thiosulfate solution
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Pipette iodine-containing solution into the conical flask
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Add a few drops of fresh starch indicator when the solution becomes pale yellow
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Titrate until the blue-black color disappears
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Record readings and repeat for concordant titres
🧪 Calculation Example
Given:
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Volume of Na₂S₂O₃ used = 22.60 mL
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Molarity = 0.100 M
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Mole ratio: I₂ : S₂O₃²⁻ = 1 : 2
Step 1: Moles of thiosulfate
Step 2: Moles of I₂
✅ Answer: 1.13 mmol of iodine was present in the sample.
🔹 Indicator and Color Change
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Start: Brown/yellow (due to iodine)
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Near endpoint: Pale yellow
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Add starch: Solution turns blue-black
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Final endpoint: Blue-black disappears → solution becomes colorless
🧠 NECTA Tips
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Always prepare starch solution fresh
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Add starch only when the solution turns pale yellow
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Keep away from sunlight – iodine evaporates
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Use a stopper for iodine solutions
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Show all equations in calculations
✅ Summary
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Iodometric titrations measure iodine via redox with thiosulfate
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Titration based on 1 I₂ : 2 S₂O₃²⁻ mole ratio
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Starch is the key indicator → blue-black to colorless
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Useful for analyzing copper(II), KIO₃, or H₂O₂ indirectly
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Important in NECTA for both theory and practical