## Abstract By application of a method which was developed in Part I of this series the pH\* of an oxalate and a succinate buffer in water, methanol‐water mixtures and methanol and that of a salicylate buffer in methanol was measured. The pH\* in methanol was measured by application of both silver
The pH of some standard solutions in methanol and methanol-water mixtures at 25° I. Theoretical Part
✍ Scribed by C. L. de Ligny; P. F. M. Luykx; Miss M. Rehbach; Miss A. A. Wieneke
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 600 KB
- Volume
- 79
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0165-0513
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
It has been shown that pH* values, determined by the electrometric method in solvents other than water, can be interpreted as ‐log m~H~γ*~H~ if the pH meter is standardized by means of a standard solution in the same solvent. The pH* of standard solutions in methanol and methanol‐water mixtures can be determined by application of the same method as has been used by the National Bureau of Standards for the measurement of the pH of standard solutions in water.
The errors that may occur when the method of the N.B.S. is applied to standard solutions in solvents other than water have been discussed. In order to correct these errors we calculated, by the method of Fuoss and Onsager, the values of K and å for NaCl, KCl, KBr and KI in methanol, from literature data on the conductivity. The conductivity of solutions of NaBr and LiCl cannot be described satisfactorily by the equation of Fuoss and Onsager.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The determination of the liquid‐junction potential at the interface of an oxalate and a succinate buffer solution of known pH\* in water, methanol or a methanol‐water mixture and a saturated KCl solution in water at 25° is described. When the pH\* of such a solution is measured by means
The dissociation constants and the molar conductivitis at the limit of zero concentration of 5nitro-, khloro-and 5-bromosalicyclic acids have been determined in water-methanol mixtures at 25°C. The experimental data have been analysed with the Lee and Wheaton conductance equation.