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Modifying The Recipe for Industrial Water Testing

Did you know that it is possible to change the drop equivalence of your test, simply by increasing or decreasing the sample volume? That you can prevent some test interferences by diluting the water sample? Here we’ll give you hints on how to modify our test instructions and still obtain reliable results. Here's the equation you need to know:

 

(original drop equivalence) x (original sample volume specified by instruction)  = new drop equivalence
alternative sample volume

 

When you are working with the #9198 graduated sample tube, you are limited to three six choices for the alternative sample volume since there are six volume marks in total molded into the side of the tube: 25 mL, 20.5 mL, 14.6 mL, 11.5 mL, 10 mL, and 5 mL. For this reason you could find it advantageous to add the #9188 graduated sample tube to your testing supplies; it offers fill marks at 50 mL, 25 mL, and 12.5 mL.

 

Increase Drop Equivalency by Decreasing Sample Volume

Let’s say you are testing P and M alkalinity in a steam boiler. The instructions in the K-1533PM call for a 25 mL sample, with 1 drop = 10 ppm. However, the alkalinity in your sample is extremely high (500 – 800 ppm) and you want to conserve your reagent. By decreasing your sample size to 10 mL, now 1 drop = 25 ppm, requiring less reagent to reach the endpoint. Be sure to decrease the amount of indicator and other reagents proportionally to the sample volume change whenever you do this.

 

Decrease Drop Equivalency by Increasing Sample Volume

Suppose you are using K-1567 to test cooling tower make-up water for calcium hardness. According to the instructions, if you use a 25 mL sample, 1 drop = 10 ppm. However, you suspect the level of calcium hardness in your water is very low. In this example, to obtain a measurement of less than 10 ppm, you can increase your sample size to 50 mL. Now, 1 drop = 5 ppm. Just be sure to increase the amount of indicator and buffer when you use a larger sample size. This particular test calls for 2 drops of indicator. Since you doubled the sample volume, you now need 4 drops of indicator and more calcium buffer. Don’t skip this step, or there may not be enough indicator and buffer in the sample to achieve a strong endpoint.

 

Diluting a Sample to Overcome Ionic Interference

Very concentrated industrial solutions often have high levels of ionic interference that can affect test results. To eliminate the interference, try diluting your sample with deionized or demineralized water. To begin, use dilution ratios of 1:4 or 1:10.

Let’s say the instruction calls for a 25 mL test sample and you decide to use a dilution ratio of 1:4 (one part of original solution in four total parts of water). In a clean second container you would combine one part of the original solution (say 25 mL) with three parts of deionized or demineralized water (75 mL) and swirl the four parts (100 mL) gently to mix. You then pour this diluted solution into the sample tube up to the 25 mL mark and perform the test. In the original scenario, you're told 1 drop of titrant = 2 ppm. Now that you've diluted your test sample though, you need to adjust the drop equivalence, too. Multiply the original drop equivalence (2) by the dilution factor (4). In this example, each drop of reagent is now equivalent to 8 ppm.

Let's assume it took 5 drops of titrant to reach the endpoint of the test. The concentration of the parameter in question is thus 5 x 8 ppm, or 40 ppm. 

For your convenience, Taylor offers both DI water (R-0833) and a demineralizer bottle (R-0804-DD). We also carry beakers, flasks, pipettes, and other labware.