Chemistry Comes Alive! C C Alive! Table of Contents Index Textbooks

Redox Titration and Animation - Procedure


In a titration you measure the quantity of one reactant that is required to consume all of another reactant. To accomplish this you measure the volume of liquid released from the buret during the procedure. The initial level of the liquid in the buret is observed and recorded. The flask containing the sample to be titrated is placed under the buret. When the purple titrant enters the flask it reacts with the colorless sample. The products of the reaction are colorless. The titrant is a purple solution. The titrant solution in the buret is added to the sample solution in the flask. At this stage all of the added titrant has reacted within the flask. We know this because the solution in the flask has reverted back to being clear and colorless. Now we are at the end point of the titration where enough titrant has been added from the buret to react with all of the reactant in the flask and the solution's color has changed slightly due to a slight excess of titrant. At this point we can take our final reading.


The size of the movie file is 5.8 MB and its duration is 85 seconds. The name of the movie file is "TITR1.MOV" and it is located in the folder "MOVIES/TITREDO".

If your browser has not brought the movie into the above space (you might be running a version of Netscape earlier than 3.0 or not have the proper plug-in), clicking on the following will possibly access the movie. Play movie.

Next movie for this topic

Back to the topic


| Chemistry Comes Alive! (entry page) | Table of Contents | Matrix of Chapters and Topics | Index | Alphabetical List of Topics | Chemistry Textbooks |

© 1999 Division of Chemical Education, Inc., American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.