Quality Control Baking Soda Lab Report
Quality Control Baking Soda Lab Report
Quality Control Baking Soda Lab Report
Quality Control for the Athenium Baking Soda Company Lab Report
Katrina Le
Kaitlynn Jackson
Baking soda is a common name for sodium hydrogen carbonate or N aHCO 3 (s) . It is a
useful compound that can be found in many everyday products. The Athenium Baking Soda
Company recently started producing baking soda using a method that reacts crystalline
ammonium hydrogen carbonate with brine, which contains high concentrations of sodium
chloride as well as traces of potassium chloride, lithium chloride, and calcium chloride that may
be present in the dry residue. Because of this, the Athenium Baking Soda Company wants to
hire quality control scientists to test for contaminants in their baking soda. To do this, the
Athenium Baking Soda Company has decided that applicants compete to analyze the
composition and purity of baking soda samples. The purpose of this experiment is to analyze the
composition of the baking soda using two different methods to figure out the percentage of
N aHCO 3 in the baking soda and by determining the impurities present in the sample.
This experiment will enable our team to use what we learned in the Thermal Gravimetric
Analysis Lab (Experiment 4), Emission Analysis of Aqueous Solutions of Groups IA and IIA
Metal Salts Lab (Experiment 10), and Determination of the Concentration of Acetic Acid in
Vinegar Lab (Experiment 12). The methods learned in these previous experiments will be used
except with different reagents. By combining the methods learned into one experiment, the
science.
The baking soda will be analyzed for metal ion contaminants with a MeasureNet
molecular energy levels which are most commonly expressed in the form of emissions or
absorptions. Because each of the metal ion contaminants releases certain wavelengths of light,
the emission spectra of the baking soda can be graphed along with the emission spectra for K + ,
Li+ , and C a2+ using standard 0.1 M solutions for each with the spectrophotometer. In that way,
the data can be compared for the presence of the listed metal ions in the baking soda sample.
The first of the two methods being used to analyze the percent composition of sodium
bicarbonate in the baking soda will be via titration. In this case, the reaction used to figure out
the amount of sodium bicarbonate in the unknown baking soda sample will be
mass of sodium bicarbonate in the baking soda sample using the equation
84.01 g N aHCO 3 1
mol N aHCO 3 mol N aHCO 3
g Baking Soda
100% + percent mass N aHCO 3 . But before
performing the titrations to figure out the percent mass of sodium bicarbonate in the baking soda,
the exact molarity of the hydrochloric acid must be standardized. To figure out the molarity of
the hydrochloric acid, it will be standardized with N aHCO 3 . The same chemical equation will
can be derived stoichiometrically. The volume of H Cl at the first equivalent point for the
standardizations will be the one used for further calculations. During both the titrations, the
volume per drop of titrant needs to be figured out in order to convert the number of drops at the
equivalence point to milliliters. This can be done by taking the total volume used in each
titration and dividing it by the number drops used during the titrations. The data can then be
The second method that will be used to determine the mass percent of sodium
bicarbonate in the unknown baking soda sample will be via thermal gravimetric analysis. The
baking soda will be heated until sodium bicarbonate decomposes into gaseous water and carbon
dioxide. The amount of mass lost in the mixture through heating is the mass of water and carbon
dioxide that escaped the mixture. This mass is stoichiometrically related to the amount of
2 N aHCO 3(s) N a 2 CO 3(s) + H 2 O (g) + C O 2(g) . From knowing the mass lost, the mass of
sodium bicarbonate in the mixture can be figured out. Using stoichiometry, we figure out that
for every two grams of N aHCO 3(s) , 0.107 grams of water and 0.262 grams of carbon dioxide
are lost. This means that for each gram of N aHCO 3(s) , 0.369 grams are lost. From there, the
by the total mass to figure out the percent mass composition using the equation
g N aHCO 3
g of Baking Soda
100% = percent mass N aHCO 3 .
Experimental
Reagents
Equipment
3. Buret
4. Beral pipets
5. Kimwipes
7. Watch glass
8. 500 mL Beaker
Safety Precautions
Setup
Solution Preparation
Emission Solutions
Pour the standard 0.1 M group IA and IIA metal chloride solutions into separate watch
glasses. To prepare the baking soda, take a good amount and dissolve it in water.
Titration Solutions
To prepare the baking soda or the sodium carbonate, take a good amount and dissolve it
in water in a 500 mL beaker using a magnetic stir bar and stir plate before their respective
titrations. Make sure the mass of baking soda or sodium carbonate used is recorded.
First, rinse the nichrome wire in distilled water to get rid of contaminants. Second, heat
up the wire. When the wire starts to glow a bright orange, position a watch glass with distilled
water near the air intake hole of the burner and place the wire into the distilled water. This
makes it so that the distilled water can spatter into the burner and clean the contaminants.
Then with each of the metal chloride solutions and the baking soda solution, do the same
thing: heat up an uncontaminated piece of nichrome wire until it glows a bright orange, position
a watch glass with the respective metal chloride solution near the air intake hole of the burner
and place the wire into the solution to spatter. During each metal chloride solution test, press
Sample at the spectrophotometer to record the data. In addition, in between each metal chloride
solution, spatter the burner with distilled water to get rid of contaminants.
When recording, make sure the MeasureNet System is plotting the data (see if the graph
peaks). You should have the emission spectra for each metal chloride solution and the baking
soda.
Part 2: Titrations
Setup the MeasureNet drop counter, pH electrode, and buret assembly as well as the
MeasureNet System to create a pH v. Volume graph. Make sure you have rinsed the buret with
water and H Cl solution and have calibrated the pH electrode. Then, place the pH probe (with
the drop counter as support) in the beaker containing the N a 2 CO 3(s) . The tip of the probe must
be submerged. Make sure a stir bar is in the solution over a stir plate and that the N a 2 CO 3(s) is
completely dissolved. The stir bar must not touch the probe. Position the buret filled with H Cl
over the beaker and center it over the eye of the drop counter (will flash red with every drop).
Enter the initial volume of H Cl and start the titration by opening the buret valve so that H Cl is
added drop by drop. Make sure the stir bar continues stirring. When the titration is done, repeat
the process with another beaker of N a 2 CO 3(s) solution and with two trials of baking soda
For each crucible and lid, measure the mass and report it. Then add a good amount of
unknown baking soda to each crucible and measure the crucible and lid with the baking soda. In
this way, you can subtract the respective masses to find the mass of the baking soda. Place both
crucibles with their lids on a hot plate at 225-degrees-Celsius. Make sure the lids are placed
slightly ajar so that the water and carbon dioxide can escape. Wait for 10-15 minutes. Take the
tongs and remove the crucibles from the hot plate and place them on a mesh cooler. Weigh the
crucible, lid, and baking soda again. Repeat the process until the mass stays fairly constant
Data Analysis
For the emission portion of the lab, first open all the files saved from the experiment in
Excel. Create a smooth lined scatter plot with the emission data from the baking soda sample
and group IA and IIA metal chloride solutions (wavelength v. intensity). Then, compare the line
for the baking soda sample with all the others to see which metals are present in the sample (the
For the titration portion of the lab, create separate smooth lined scatter plot for each of
the titration curves on Excel. Then, locate the equivalence points necessary for each titration and
report the number of drops at the equivalence points and the number of drops used throughout
Unknown #823
(yes/no)
(mL)
(mL(
(mL)
(mL)
Mass of Baking Soda & cool crucible & lid 18.020 20.666
(g)
present. From the titration portion of the lab, it was found that the percent mass of sodium
bicarbonate in the baking soda sample was 28.1-percent and 29.4-percent in the first and second
trials respectively with an average percent mass of 28.8-percent. From the thermal gravimetric
portion of the lab, it was found from the first trial that the percent mass was 28.9-percent. In the
Discussion
The results from the experiment were rather clear. The average percent mass of sodium
bicarbonate in the baking soda found via titration was extremely close to the percent mass found
in the first trial of the thermal gravimetric analysis as they were 28.8-percent and 28.9 percent
respectively (only 0.1-percent off). With the emission spectroscopy portion of the lab, it was
obvious both qualitatively and quantitatively that only potassium was present as a contaminant as
the sample had the same maximum intensity wavelengths as the potassium disregarding that of
sodium, which was given that it would be present; the sample had maximum intensity
wavelengths of 766.23 and 769.97 nanometers while potassium had maximum intensity
While the results were clear for the first trial of the thermal gravimetric analysis, the
results for the second trial was an obvious outlier with a percent mass of 65.3-percent. Because
the results for the percent mass for the titrations and the first trial were so close, this 65.3-percent
was omitted. The large difference could be due to misreporting the mass of the cool crucible and
lid for the second trial, which was reported to be 20.143 grams. For example, if the mass had
been one less with 19.143 grams, the percent mass would have been calculated to be
22.4-percent, a result much closer in range to the others. With the titrations, it can be seen that
the pH would go back up and down, creating a rougher looking graph. This made it harder to
figure out the position of the equivalence point. Another possible source of error with the
titrations was that the drop counter did not sense a few drops during some trials. If the
experiment would to be improved, one way of doing so would be to use a more accurate and
precise pH probe. Another way would be to position the drop counter and buret in a way that the
Conclusion
The purpose of this experiment was to analyze the composition of an unknown sample of
baking soda. To do so, titrations and thermal gravimetric analysis were used to figure out the
percent mass of sodium bicarbonate in the unknown sample. Emission spectroscopy was also
used to figure out which contaminants out of lithium, potassium, and calcium were present in the
sample. Via titration, it was found that the unknown sample, unknown #823, had a percent-mass
of sodium bicarbonate of 28.8-percent. Via thermal gravimetric analysis, it was found that the
percent mass of sodium bicarbonate was 28.9-percent. Lastly, via emission spectroscopy, it was
Stanton, B., Zhu, L., & Atwood, C. H. (2006). Experiments in general chemistry featuring
The book also provided the information needed for the procedure and detailed instructions. The
book also gave information on the theories behind spectroscopy, titrations, and thermal
gravimetric analysis.
Graybeal, J. D., Hurst, G. S., Stoner, J. O., & Chu, S. (2016, May 17). Spectroscopy - Theory of