Hi Glory - Yes, standardization is another expression for titer determination and mainly used in Pharmacopeias. It means we determine the exact concentration of a titrant and compensate influences from the equipment and environment. Please let us know if you have any other questions!
Hi Ashraf Mohamed - A stable drift for a correct water determination is absolutely necessary. What does this mean? A titration cell is never 100% tight, we always have traces of water entering the titration cell during a titration process. The drift is the amount of water which enters into the titration cell per minute. It is measured in µg/minute. The amount of water that enters here during a sample titration is subtracted from the result. To do this, the drift is determined and the titrator software automatically subtracts the portion in the sample results. It is recommended that the drift is below 25µg/minute for volumetric titration, for coulometric titration it should be below 15µg/minute. It's important that the drift is stable and does not go up and down when starting a sample titration. Please let us know if you have any other questions!
Did you keep the air in the syringe or push out before measuring ?
Thanks for the video.Please is Titre determination also the same as standardization?
Hi Glory - Yes, standardization is another expression for titer determination and mainly used in Pharmacopeias. It means we determine the exact concentration of a titrant and compensate influences from the equipment and environment. Please let us know if you have any other questions!
Is it mandatory to conduct a suitability test before measuring a sample for the first time?
what is the benefits for doing Drift determination ?
Hi Ashraf Mohamed - A stable drift for a correct water determination is absolutely necessary. What does this mean? A titration cell is never 100% tight, we always have traces of water entering the titration cell during a titration process.
The drift is the amount of water which enters into the titration cell per minute. It is measured in µg/minute. The amount of water that enters here during a sample titration is subtracted from the result. To do this, the drift is determined and the titrator software automatically subtracts the portion in the sample results.
It is recommended that the drift is below 25µg/minute for volumetric titration, for coulometric titration it should be below 15µg/minute. It's important that the drift is stable and does not go up and down when starting a sample titration.
Please let us know if you have any other questions!