Determination of The Alcohol Lab
Determination of The Alcohol Lab
Determination of The Alcohol Lab
Procedure
Record the method used (A or B) and whether the initial sample of root beer is diluted
or not in your data table.
Method A:
1. Pipette 10 mL of root beer into a 250 mL volumetric flask and make up to the
mark with water.
2. Place a 5 mL aliquot of the diluted root beer in a 150 mL Erlenmeyer flask and
add 10 mL of 0.05 mol L-1 potassium dichromate. Slowly add about 20 mL of
50% sulfuric acid solution to each flask. WARNING This solution is very
corrosive.
3. Stopper each flask loosely and heat in a water bath, at no more than 50C, for at
least 60 minutes.
4. Remove from the water bath and add about 10 mL of 0.5 mol L-1 KI.
5. Titrate the contents with 0.1 mol L-1 sodium thiosulfate solution. When the brown
color of the solution gets a green tinge, add a few drops of starch indicator.
Continue adding thiosulfate solution until the solution goes a clear, green-blue
color. This is the endpoint of the titration- it is not easy to detect, but with
practice it will become easier.
1. NOTE: It is possible to check whether the endpoint has been reached by holding
the solution in the sunlight and adding a drop of starch indicator. The appearance
of a dark blue color in the solution (where the drop was added) indicates iodine is
still present.
Method B:
If the alcohol sample being investigated
contains significant quantities of other
substances that are able to be oxidized by
acidified dichromate then the value obtained
will be too high. This commonly occurs with
alcoholic drinks such as beers and wines
because of the presence of other organic
molecules such as secondary alcohols. In
these situations it would usually be necessary
to separate the alcohol from the sample by
fractional distillation which is difficult and time consuming.
However, if the interfering substances are less volatile than the alcohol itself the
following modification known as Nicholls diffusion works adequately (as described in
CHEMNZ No 73, Nov 98 pp 21-22). In this method, instead of adding the alcohol
sample directly to the acidified dichromate mixture it is placed in a small container and
suspended above the dichromate solution and left to diffuse into the solution where it is
oxidized as previously described. The other components of the alcohol sample remain
behind in the sample container and so do not contribute to the oxidation process. A
diagram of the experimental set up is shown at right. Because the suspended container is
2