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Gravimetric Methods of

Analysis
Chapter 12
Gravimetric

• Encompasses all technique in which the signal is a mass


or change in mass

• Measuring mass is the most fundamental of all analytical


measurements

• Gravimetric is the oldest analytical technique


Using Mass as a Signal

• Determine analyte gravimetrically by :

- Directly:

1. determining its mass eg: weighting a solid waste


2. the mass of a compound containing analyte. eg:
aqueous ion, Pb2+, chemically converting it to a
solid form. Suspend a pair of Pt electrodes in
solution, Pb2+ ion in solution oxidizes to PbO2 and
deposits on the Pt electrode
Cont’
- Indirectly

1. by measuring a change in mass due to its loss, eg :


heat the sample
2. The mass of a compound formed as the result of a
reaction involving the analyte, eg: using HgCl2 to
measure the mass of PO33- (HgCl2 is added, one
mole of PO33- produces one mole Hg2Cl2
Types of Gravimetric Methods
• Precipitation gravimetry – which the signal is the mass of
a precipitate

• Electrogravimetry – which the signal is the mass of an


electrodeposit on the cathode or anode in an
elecrochemical cell

• Volatilization gravimetry – which the loss of a volatile


species gives rise to the signal

• Particulate gravimetry – which the mass of a particulate


analyte is determined following its separation from its
matrix
Conservation of Mass

• analyte present in a sample be proportional to


the mass or change in mass
moles Pb2+ = moles PbO2
moles PO33- = moles Hg2Cl2

• removing analyte from its matrix


filter’s final mass – filter’s initial mass = g suspended solid

• Moisture content
sample’s initial mass – sample’s final mass = g H2O
Why Gravimetry is Important

• Is one of only a small number of techniques which


measurements require only base SI units.

• Estimating the composition of these materials often


involves a gravimetric analysis
Gravimetry

• Precipitation Gravimetry

• Volatilization Gravimetry

• Particulate Gravimetry
Precipitation Gravimetry

• Precipitant – a reagent that causes the precipitation of a


soluble species

• The precipitate is the product of a simple metathesis


reaction between the analyte and precipitant

• Any reaction generating a precipitate can potentially


serve as a gravimetric method
cont’

• Theory and practice

• Quantitative applications

• Qualitative applications

• Evaluating precipitation gravimetry


Theory and Practice (TnP)

Important attributes:

• First – the precipitate must be of low solubility, high


purity and of known composition

• Second – the precipitate must be in a form that is easy to


separate from the reaction mixture
Solubility Considerations

• An accurate precipitation requires precipitate’s solubility


be minimal (accuracy > ±0.1%)
• Isolated precipitate must account for at least 99.9%of
the analyte
• Eg: Ag+ can be determined gravimetrically by adding Cl-
as a precipitant forming a precipitate of AgCl

Ag  (aq)  Cl  (aq) AgCl(s) Eq 8.1


Cont’
• If this the only reaction considered, falsely conclude that the
precipitate’s solubility, SAgCl, is

  Cl 
S AgCl  Ag  
K sp

Eq 8.2

• AgCl shows a more complex solubility relationship than that


suggested by eq 8.2. Ag+ also forms a series of soluble chloro-
complexes
K1 Eq 8.3
Ag+ (aq) + Cl- (aq) AgCl (aq)
2
Ag+ (aq) + 2Cl- (aq) AgCl2- (aq) Eq 8.4

3
Ag+ (aq) + 3Cl- (aq) AgCl32- (aq) Eq 8.5
Cont’
• The solubility of AgCl, is the sum of the equilibrium
concentrations for all soluble forms of Ag+
SAgCl = [Ag+] + [AgCl(aq)] + [AgCl2-] + [AgCl32-] Eq 8.6

Solubility of AgCl in terms of the equilibrium


concentration of Cl-

S AgCl 
K sp
Cl 

 
 K1 K sp   2 K sp Cl    3 K sp Cl   
2
Eq 8.7

As Cl- is added to a solution of Ag+, the solubility of AgCl


initially decreases because of reaction 8.1. increasing the
concentration of chloride, however leads to an increase
in the solubility of AgCl due to the soluble chloro-
complexes formed in reaction 8.3 – 8.5.
Cont’
• pH also may affects the precipitate’s solubility. eg:
hydroxide precipitate (such as Fe(OH)3), more soluble at
lower pH, which the concentration of OH- is small.

• The effect of pH on solubility also affects precipitates


containing basic or acidic ions.

• Eg : Ca3(PO4)2 is pH dependent, consists of 4 reactions,


Ksp
Ca3(PO4)2(s) 3Ca2+ (aq) + 2PO43- (aq) Eq 8.8
Kb1
PO43-(aq) + H2O (l) HPO42-(aq) + OH-(aq) Eq 8.9
Kb2
HPO42-(aq) + H2O (l) H2PO4-(aq) + OH-(aq) Eq 8.10
Kb3
H2PO4-(aq) + H2O (l) H3PO4(aq) + OH-(aq) Eq 8.11
Cont’

• The ladder diagram for phosphate, provides a


convenient way to evaluate the pH-dependent solubility
of phosphate precipitates
Cont’

• Solubility can often be decreased by using a non-


aqueous solvent

• Precipitate’s solubility greater in aqueous solutions


because of the ability of water molecules to stabilize ions
through solvation

• Poorer solvating ability of non-aqueous solvents, even


those that are polar
Avoiding Impurities
• Precipitate must be free from impurities

• Precipitate typically occurs in a solution rich in dissolved


solids

• A precipitate is generally crystalline, even if only on a


microscopic scale, with a well-defined lattice structure of
cations and anions

• Precipitate particles grow in size because of the


electrostatic attraction between charged ions on the
surface of the precipitate and oppositely charged ions in
solution
Cont’
• One common type of impurity is an inclusion – a co-
precipitated impurity n which the interfering ion occupies
a lattice site in the precipitate
• Probability of forming an inclusion is greatest when the
interfering ion is present at higher concentrations than
the dissolved lattice ion

• However, inclusion does not decrease the amount of


analyte that precipitates and precipitate’s mass is always
larger than expected

• Can be removed through reprecipitation


Cont’
• Second type of co-precipitated impurity, Occlusions –
impurity trapped within a precipitate as it forms

• Form in two ways –


1. occurs when physically adsorbed ions are surrounded
by additional precipitate before they can be desorbed
or displaced- mass is always greater than expected

2. occurs when rapid precipitation traps a pocket of


solution within the growing precipitate-mass may be
less than expected
Cont’
• Occlusions are minimized by maintaining the precipitate
in equilibrium with its supernatant solution for an
extended time – the process called digestion
• Digestion – the process by which a precipitate is given
time to form larger, purer particles
• Precipitate dissolves and reforms, ensures that occluded
material is eventually exposed to the supernatant
solution
• After precipitate complete, the surface adsorbates,
chemically or physically adsorbed, constitute a third type
of coprecipitated impurity.
• Adsorbates – a co-precipitated impurty that adsorbs to
the surface of a precipitate
Cont’

• Surface adsorption is minimized by decreasing the


precipitate’s available surface area

• Another source of impurities occurs when other species


in solution precipitate under the conditions of the
analysis

• Solution conditions necessary to minimize the solubility


of a desired precipitate may lead to the formation of an
additional precipitate that interferes in the analysis
Cont’

• Can be minimized by carefully controlling solution


conditions, either removed by filtration or masked using
a suitable complexing agent

• Also can separate an analyte from a potential interferent


or isolate and weigh both the analyte and the interferent
Controlling Particle Size
• Precipitation consists of two distinct events, nucleation and
the subsequent growth of these particles
• Relative supersaturation – a measure of the extent to which
a solution, or a localized region of solution, contains more
dissolved solute than that expected at equilibrium (RSS)
• A solute relative supersaturation, RSS

QS
RSS  Eq 8.12
S

Q = solute’s actual concentration


S = solute’s expected concentration at equilibrium
Q – S = a measure of the solute’s supersaturation
when precipitation begins
Cont’
Large value – indicates that a solution is highly
supersaturated, solution are unstable nd high rates of
nucleation-small particle
Small value – precipitation is more likely to occur by
particle growth than by nucleation

• Homogeneous precipitation – a precipitation in which the


precipitant is generated in situ by a chemical reaction

• Two general methods, if pH dependent then the analyte


and precipitant can be mixed under conditions in which
precipitation does not occur. The pH is then raised or
lowered as needed by chemically generating OH- or
H3O+
Cont’
• Second method – the precipitant itself is generated by a
chemical reaction.

• Eg : Ba2+ can be homogeneously precipitated as BaSO4


by hydrolyzing sulphamic acid to produce SO42-

• Advantage homogeneous precipitation – produce large


particle of precipitate that are relatively free from
impurities, however the process need time

• A precipitate’s particles are electrically neutral, they tend


to coagulate into larger particles.
Cont’
• Coagulation – the process of smaller particles of
precipitate clumping together to form larger particles

• Cannot occur if the secondary adsorption layer is too


thick

• Can be induced in two ways:


– Increasing the concentration of the ions responsible
for the secondary adsorption layer
– By heating the solution
Cont’
• After precipitation and digestion are complete, separate
by filtration
Proper procedure to
transferring the
supernatant* to the
filter paper cone

Supernatant – the
solution that remains
after a precipitate
forms
precipitation
complete
Digestion

Filtering the precipitate

Rinsing the precipitate

Drying the precipitate

Determine the composition of final precipitate


Procedure for filtering through a filtering
crucible. The trap is used to prevent
water from a water aspirator from
backwashing into the suction flask
Determination of Mg2+ in water and wastewater
Quantitative Applications

• Inorganic analysis – most important precipitants for


inorganic cations are chromate, the halides, hydroxide,
oxalate, sulfate, sulfide and phosphate.
• Inorganic anions can be determined using the same
reactions by reversing the analyte and precipitant.
• Eg : chromate can be determined by adding BaCl2 and
precipitatingBaCrO4.
• Eg : sulfate is analyzed by precipitating BaSO4, using
BaCl2 as the precipitant
Quantitative Application – cont’

• Organic analysis – several organic functional groups or


heteroatoms can be determined using gravimetric
precipitation methods

• Examples are outlined in Table 8.5


Example 8.1

• An ore containing magnetite, Fe3O4, was analyzed by


dissolving a 1.5419 g sample in concentrated HCl, giving
a mixture of Fe2+ and Fe3+. After adding HNO3 to oxidize
any Fe2+ to Fe3+, the resulting solution was diluted with
water and the Fe3+ precipitated as Fe(OH)3 by adding
NH3. After filtering and rinsing, the residue was ignited,
giving 0.8525 g of pure Fe2O3. Calculate the %w/w
Fe3O4 in the sample.

Note : demonstrates the direct analysis of a single analyte


Example 8.2

• A 0.6113 g sample of Dow metal, containing aluminum,


magnesium, and other metals, was dissolved and
treated to prevent interferences by the other metals. The
aluminum and magnesium were precipitated with 8-
hydroxyquinoline. After filtering and drying, the mixture of
Al(C9H6NO)3 and Mg(C9H6NO)2 was found to weight
7.8154 g. The mixture of dried precipitates was then
ignited, converting the precipitate to a mixture of Al2O3
and MgO. The weight of this mixed solid was found to be
1.0022 g. Calculate the %w/w Al and %w/w Mg in the
alloy.
Qualitative Applications

• Precipitation gravimetry can also be applied to the


identification of inorganic and organic analytes, using
precipitants such as those outlined in Tables 8.1, 8.2, 8.4
and 8.5
• Since this does not require quantitative measurements,
the analytical signal is simply the observation that a
precipitate has formed.
• Largely replaced by spectroscopic methods of analysis
Evaluating Precipitation Gravimetry
• Scale of operation – governed by the sensitivity of the
balance and the availability of sample. Usually limited to
major or minor analytes, macro or meso samples. The
analysis of trace level analytes or micro samples usually
requires a microanalytical balance.

• Accuracy – macro-major samples, relative errors of 0.1-


0.2% are routinely achieved. Limitations – solubility
losses, impurities in the precipitate and the loss of
precipitate during handling

• Precision – depends on the amount of sample and


precipitate involved. Smaller amounts, relative precisions
1-2 ppt, larger amounts, extended to several ppm
Cont’

• Sensitivity – relate the signal (g of precipitate) to the


absolute amount of analyte in the sample

• g precipitate = k x g of analyte

k, method’s sensitivity, determined by the


stoichiometry between the precipitate and the
analyte
Cont’
• Eg : determination of Fe as Fe2O3. Conservation of
mass for Fe, 2 x moles Fe2O3 = moles Fe

• Converting moles to grams and rearranging

1 FW Fe2O3
g Fe2O3    g Fe
2 AW Fe

• k is equal to

1 FW Fe2O3
k  Eq 8.14
2 AW Fe
Cont’

• Method’s sensitivity can be improved in two ways:


increase the ratio of the precipitate’s molar mass to that
of the analyte; indicated by term of ½ in eq 8.14, which
accounts for the stoichiometry between the analyte and
precipitate.

• Also can be improved by forming precipitates containing


fewer units of the analyte

• Selectivity : due to chemical nature, precipitants are


usually not selective for a single analyte
Cont’

• Time, cost and equipment – are time-intensive and rarely


practical when analyzing a large number of samples.

• Does not require an analysts’s immediate supervision,


practical for a few sample

• Few equipments needed, inexpensive, routinely


available in laboratories, and easy to maintain.
Volatilization Gravimetry

• Second approach to gravimetry – thermally or chemically


decompose a solid sample

• Volatile products of the decomposition reaction may be


trapped and weighed to provide quantitative information

• Thermogravimetry – a form of volatilization gravimetry in


which the change in a sample’s mass is monitored while
it is heated
Volatilization Gravimetry

• Theory and practice

• Quantitative applications
Theory and Practice

• Requires the products of the decomposition reaction be


known

• For organic compounds, volatilization is accomplished by


combustion, and the products are gases such, CO2,
H2O, N2

• Inorganic compounds, identification of volatilization


products depend on the temperature at which the
decomposition is conducted
Cont’

• The loss of a volatile gas on thermal decomposition is


indicated by a step in the thermogram

• Thermogram – a graph showing change in mass as a


function of applied temperature
Thermogram for •The products of a thermal
CaC2O4.H2O decomposition can be deduced by
monitoring the sample’s mass as a
function of applied temperature
Example 8.4

The thermogram for CaC2O4.H2O shows the change in


mass. The original sample weighed 24.60 mg and was
heated from room temperature to 1000 0C at a rate of 5
0C/min. The following changes in mass and corresponding

temperature ranges were observed:


• Loss of 3.03 mg from 100 – 250 0C
• Loss of 4.72 mg from 400 – 500 0C
• Loss of 7.41 mg from 700 – 850 0C
Determine the identities of the volatilization products and
the solid residue at each step of the thermal
decomposition.
Equipment

• The weight of a solid residue is determined following


either thermal decomposition at a fixed temperature or
combustion
• Accomplished using a Bunsen or Meker burner, a
laboratory oven or a muffle furnace, with the volatile
products vented to the atmosphere
• Weight of the sample and the solid residue are
determined using an analytical balance
• Decomposition of the sample is conducted in a closed
container, and the volatilized gases are carried by a
purge-gas stream through one or more selective
absorbent traps
Quantitative Applications

• Inorganic analysis – determining the inorganic ash


content of organic materials, such as polymers and
paper, is an example of a direct volatilization gravimetric
analysis.
• Indirect analyses based on the weight of the residue
remaining after volatilization are commonly used in
determining moisture
Cont’

• Organic analysis –the combustion products are passed


through preweighed tubes containing appropriate
absorbents – provides a direct indication

• Also used to determine biomass in water and


wastewater
Cont’

• Quantitative calculations – by applying the principle of


conservation of mass to carbon

• See example 8.5 for direct volatilization gravimetric


analysis (determination of a compound’s elemental
composition)

• See example 8.6 for indirect volatilization gravimetric


analysis (the change in the sample’s weight is
proportional to the amount of analyte)
Example 8.5

• A 101.3 mg sample of an organic compound known to


contain Cl is burned in pure O2 and the combustion
gases collected in absorbent tubes. The tube used to
trap CO2 increase in mass by 167.6 mg, and the tube for
trapping H2O shows a 13.7 mg increase. A second
sample of 121.8 mg is treated with concentrated HNO3
producing Cl2, which subsequently reacts with Ag+,
forming 262.7 mg of AgCl. Determine the compound’s
composition, as well as its empirical formula.
Example 8.6

• A sample of slag from a blast furnace is analyzed for


SiO2 by decomposing a 0.5003 g sample with HCl,
leaving a residue with a mass of 0.1414 g. After treating
with HF and H2SO4 and evaporating the volatile SiF4, a
residue with a mass of 0.0183 g remains. Determine the
%w/w SiO2 in the sample.
Example 8.7

• A 26.23 mg sample of MgC2O4.H2O and inert materials


is heated to constant weight at 1200oC, leaving a residue
weighing 20.98 mg. A sample of pure MgC2O4.H2O,
when treated in the same fashion, undergoes a 69.08%
change in its mass. Determine the %w/w MgC2O4.H2O in
the sample.
Evaluating Volatilization Gravimetry

• The scale of operation, accuracy and precision of


gravimetric volatilization methods are similar to that
described precipitation gravimetry

• Direct analysis (DA) - Sensitivity is fixed by the analyte’s


chemical form following combustion or volatilization.
• DA – based on the residue’s weight following
combustion or volatilization is possible when the residue
only contains the analyte of interest
Cont’

• Indirect analysis, (IA)– sensitivity can be improved by


carefully choosing the conditions for combustion or
volatilization so that the change in mass is as large as
possible.
• IA – only feasible when the residue’s change in mass
results from the loss of a single volatile product
containing the analyte
Particulate Gravimetry

• Two approaches :
• filtration – solid particulates are separated from their gas,
liquid or solid matrix, and
• Extraction – can be extracted from its matrix with a
suitable solvent
Four possible mechanisms for
solid-state extraction: (a)
adsorption onto a solid
substrate, (b) absorption into
a thin polymer or chemical
film coated on a solid
substrate, (c) metal-ligand
complexation in which the
ligand is covalently bound to
the solid substrate and (d)
antibody-antigen binding in
which the receptor is
covalently bound to the solid
substrate.
Quantitative Applications

• Microbiological testing of water


• Total airborne particulates are determined using a high-
volume air sampler
• Grain size distributions for sediments and soils are used
to determine the amount of sand, silt and clay present in
a sample
Example 8.8 – Quantitative Calculations

• A 200.0 mL sample of water was filtered through a


preweighed glass fiber filter. After drying to constant
weight at 105oC, the filter was found to have increased in
mass by 48.2mg. Determine the total suspended solids
for the sample in parts per million
Evaluating Particulate Gravimetry

• Uses the same balances as other gravimetric methods


• Also capable to achieve similar levels of accuracy and
precision
Exercises
1. The concentration of arsenic in an insecticide can be
determined gravimetrically by precipitating it as
MgNH4AsO4. The precipitate is ignited and weighed as
Mg2As2O7. Determine the %w/w As2O3 in a 1.627 g sample
of insecticide that yields 106.5 mg of Mg2As2O7.
(Answer:4.17%w/w As2O3)
2. After preparing a sample of alum, K2SO4·Al2(SO4)3·24H2O,
a student determined its purity gravimetrically. A 1.2931 g
sample was dissolved and the aluminum precipitated as
Al(OH)3. The precipitate was collected by filtration,
washed, and ignited to Al2O3, yielding 0.1357 g. What is
the purity of the alum preparation?
(Answer: 97.65%)
Exercises
3. A 1.4639 g sample of limestone was analysed for Fe, Ca and
Mg. The iron was determined as Fe2O3, yielding 0.0357 g. Calcium
was isolated as CaSO4, yielding a precipitate of 1.4058 g, and Mg
was isolated as 0.0672 g of Mg2P2O7. Report the amount of Fe, Ca,
and Mg in the limestone sample as %w/w Fe2O3, %w/w CaO and
%w/w MgO.
(Answer: 2.44 %w/wFe2O3, 39.6% w/w CaO, 1.66%w/w MgO)

4. A 516.7 mg sample containing a mixture of K2SO4 and


(NH4)2SO4 was dissolved in water and treated with BaCl2,
precipitating the SO42- as BaSO4. The resulting precipitate was
isolated by filtration, rinsed free of impurities, and dried to a
constant weight yielding 863.5 mg of BaSO4. What is the %w/w
K2SO4 in the sample?
(Answer: 22.2%w/w K2SO4)

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