
Titration (also known as titrimetry and volumetric analysis) is a common laboratory method of
quantitative
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chemical analysis to determine the
concentration
In chemistry, concentration is the abundance of a constituent divided by the total volume of a mixture. Several types of mathematical description can be distinguished: '' mass concentration'', '' molar concentration'', '' number concentration'' ...
of an identified
analyte (a substance to be analyzed). A
reagent, termed the ''titrant'' or ''titrator'', is prepared as a
standard solution of known concentration and volume. The titrant reacts with a solution of ''analyte'' (which may also be termed the ''titrand'') to determine the analyte's concentration. The volume of titrant that reacted with the analyte is termed the ''titration volume''.
History and etymology
The word "titration" descends from the French word ''titrer'' (1543), meaning the proportion of gold or silver in coins or in works of gold or silver; i.e., a measure of fineness or purity. ''Tiltre'' became ''titre'', which thus came to mean the "fineness of alloyed gold", and then the "concentration of a substance in a given sample". In 1828, the French chemist
Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac first used ''titre'' as a verb (''titrer''), meaning "to determine the concentration of a substance in a given sample".
Volumetric analysis originated in late 18th-century France.
François-Antoine-Henri Descroizilles (
fr) developed the first burette (which was similar to a graduated cylinder) in 1791. Gay-Lussac developed an improved version of the burette that included a side arm, and invented the terms "
pipette" and "
burette" in an 1824 paper on the standardization of indigo solutions. The first true burette was invented in 1845 by the French chemist
Étienne Ossian Henry (1798–1873). A major improvement of the method and popularization of volumetric analysis was due to
Karl Friedrich Mohr, who redesigned the burette into a simple and convenient form, and who wrote the first textbook on the topic, ''Lehrbuch der chemisch-analytischen Titrirmethode'' (''Textbook of analytical chemistry titration methods''), published in 1855.
Procedure

A typical titration begins with a
beaker or
Erlenmeyer flask containing a very precise amount of the analyte and a small amount of
indicator (such as
phenolphthalein) placed underneath a calibrated
burette or
chemistry pipetting syringe containing the titrant. Small volumes of the titrant are then added to the analyte and indicator until the indicator changes color in reaction to the titrant saturation threshold, representing arrival at the
endpoint of the titration, meaning the amount of titrant balances the amount of analyte present, according to the reaction between the two. Depending on the endpoint desired, single drops or less than a single drop of the titrant can make the difference between a permanent and temporary change in the indicator.
Preparation techniques
Typical titrations require titrant and analyte to be in a liquid (solution) form. Though solids are usually dissolved into an aqueous solution, other solvents such as
glacial acetic acid or
ethanol
Ethanol (abbr. EtOH; also called ethyl alcohol, grain alcohol, drinking alcohol, or simply alcohol) is an organic compound. It is an alcohol with the chemical formula . Its formula can be also written as or (an ethyl group linked to a h ...
are used for special purposes (as in
petrochemistry, which specializes in petroleum.) Concentrated analytes are often diluted to improve accuracy.
Many non-acid–base titrations require a constant
pH during the reaction. Therefore, a
buffer solution may be added to the titration chamber to maintain the pH.
In instances where two reactants in a sample may react with the titrant and only one is the desired analyte, a separate
masking solution may be added to the reaction chamber which eliminates the effect of the unwanted ion.
Some reduction-oxidation (
redox) reactions may require heating the sample solution and titrating while the solution is still hot to increase the
reaction rate. For instance, the oxidation of some oxalate solutions requires heating to to maintain a reasonable rate of reaction.
Titration curves
A titration curve is a curve in graph the ''x''-coordinate of which represents the volume of
titrant added since the beginning of the titration, and the ''y''-coordinate of which represents the concentration of the analyte at the corresponding stage of the titration (in an acid–base titration, the ''y''-coordinate usually represents the pH of the solution).
In an
acid–
base titration, the titration curve represents the strength of the corresponding acid and base. For a strong acid and a strong base, the curve will be relatively smooth and very steep near the equivalence point. Because of this, a small change in titrant volume near the equivalence point results in a large pH change and many indicators would be appropriate (for instance
litmus,
phenolphthalein or
bromothymol blue).
If one reagent is a weak acid or base and the other is a strong acid or base, the titration curve is irregular and the pH shifts less with small additions of titrant near the
equivalence point
The equivalence point, or stoichiometric point, of a chemical reaction is the point at which chemically equivalent quantities of reactants have been mixed. For an acid-base reaction the equivalence point is where the moles of acid and the moles o ...
. For example, the titration curve for the titration between
oxalic acid (a weak acid) and
sodium hydroxide (a strong base) is pictured. The equivalence point occurs between pH 8-10, indicating the solution is basic at the equivalence point and an indicator such as
phenolphthalein would be appropriate. Titration curves corresponding to weak bases and strong acids are similarly behaved, with the solution being acidic at the equivalence point and indicators such as
methyl orange and
bromothymol blue being most appropriate.
Titrations between a weak acid and a weak base have titration curves which are very irregular. Because of this, no definite indicator may be appropriate and a
pH meter is often used to monitor the reaction.
The type of function that can be used to describe the curve is termed a
sigmoid function.
Types of titrations
There are many types of titrations with different procedures and goals. The most common types of qualitative titration are
acid–base titrations and
redox titrations.
Acid–base titration

Acid–base titrations depend on the
neutralization between an acid and a base when mixed in solution. In addition to the sample, an appropriate
pH indicator is added to the titration chamber, representing the pH range of the equivalence point. The acid–base indicator indicates the endpoint of the titration by changing color. The endpoint and the equivalence point are not exactly the same because the equivalence point is determined by the stoichiometry of the reaction while the endpoint is just the color change from the indicator. Thus, a careful selection of the indicator will reduce the indicator error. For example, if the equivalence point is at a pH of 8.4, then the phenolphthalein indicator would be used instead of Alizarin Yellow because phenolphthalein would reduce the indicator error. Common indicators, their colors, and the pH range in which they change color are given in the table above. When more precise results are required, or when the reagents are a weak acid and a weak base, a
pH meter or a conductance meter are used.
For very strong bases, such as
organolithium reagent,
metal amides, and
hydrides, water is generally not a suitable solvent and indicators whose
pKa
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are in the range of aqueous pH changes are of little use. Instead, the titrant and indicator used are much weaker acids, and anhydrous solvents such as
THF are used.

The approximate pH during titration can be approximated by three kinds of calculations. Before beginning of titration, the concentration of
+/chem> is calculated in aqueous solution of weak acid before adding any base. When the number of moles of bases added equals the number of moles of initial acid or so called equivalence point
The equivalence point, or stoichiometric point, of a chemical reaction is the point at which chemically equivalent quantities of reactants have been mixed. For an acid-base reaction the equivalence point is where the moles of acid and the moles o ...
, one of hydrolysis and the pH is calculated in the same way that the conjugate bases of the acid titrated was calculated. Between starting and end points, +/chem> is obtained from the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation and titration mixture is considered as buffer. In Henderson-Hasselbalch equation the and are said to be the molarities that would have been present even with dissociation or hydrolysis. In a buffer, +/chem> can be calculated exactly but the dissociation of , the hydrolysis of A- and self-ionization of water must be taken into account. Four independent equations must be used:
:
:
:
: