Oxidizing Power of Laundry Bleach
Oxidizing Power of Laundry Bleach
Oxidizing Power of Laundry Bleach
LAB
From Juniata College, Science in Motion
INTRODUCTION
Many times in chemistry we must use indirect methods to find the concentration of a
chemical in a solution. In this experiment the concentration of NaOCl, the active reagent in
laundry bleaches, will be found. The bleach is reacted with iodide and iodine is formed. The
amount of iodine formed is then determined by reaction with sodium thiosulfate. Thus, the
amount of NaOCl is found indirectly from the amount of iodine it produces.
This procedure is one type of redox titration known as an iodometric analysis. In the first
step, excess potassium iodide is added to a solution of bleach and is oxidized to iodine by the
hypochlorite ion. Acetic acid is added to provide the hydrogen ion needed for the reaction.
The amount of iodine formed by this reaction is found by titrating with a sodium thiosulfate
solution.
The endpoint of the reaction would normally be difficult to determine. The reaction
mixture would go from pale yellow to colorless at the endpoint. The addition of starch produces
an intense blue-black complex. The endpoint is detected by the disappearance of the intense blue
color of the iodine-starch complex.
PURPOSE
The purpose of this experiment is to determine the NaOCl content of laundry bleaches.
EQUIPMENT/MATERIALS
buret
magnetic stirrer/stirring bar (optional) 100 mL graduated cylinder
250 mL Erlenmeyer flask 0.100 M sodium thiosulfate
250 mL volumetric flask 10 mL graduated cylinder
spoon/spatula balance
5 mL pipet buret clamp
wash bottle ring stand
vial or small beaker glacial acetic acid
potassium iodide starch solution
beaker for buret waste distilled water
SAFETY
PROCEDURE
1. Use a 5 mL pipet to measure out a sample of a laundry bleach of your choice. Place the
bleach in a vial or a small beaker that has been previously weighed. Determine the mass of
the 5 mL of bleach and its mass per mL. Record these values on your data sheet.
2. Transfer the bleach to a 250 mL volumetric flask. Rinse the original container with distilled
water and add this to the volumetric flask. Bring to volume.
3. Rinse the buret with distilled water. Add two small portions of sodium thiosulfate solution to
the buret. Drain these samples through the buret and discard them. Fill the buret with the
sodium thiosulfate solution. Adjust the level and make sure the tip is filled. Record the
initial level of the solution in the buret on the data table.
4. Use a 100 mL graduated cylinder to measure out a 50 mL portion of the bleach solution.
Place the sample in an Erlenmeyer flask. Add the stirring bar if one is to be used.
5. Add 2 grams of potassium iodide to the flask. The amount added does not have to be precise.
In the hood, add 10 mL of glacial acetic acid.
6. Titrate with the sodium thiosulfate until the solution is light yellow. At this time add about 5
mL of the starch indicator.
7. Titrate slowly until the blue color disappears. Record the amount of sodium thiosulfate
solution in the buret at the end of the titration. Record this value in your data table. Note:
The blue color may reappear after the titration has been completed due to air oxidation of the
iodide.
Name _________________________
Date__________________________
DATA:
CALCULATIONS
QUESTIONS
Equation A Equation B
a. species oxidized
b. species reduced
c. oxidizing agent
d. reducing agent
2. Suppose the density of a bleach was found to be 1.07 g/mL. How would the results of an
experiment be affected if a correction for this were not made?