This document provides instructions for determining the purity of aspirin through acid-base titration. Aspirin is synthesized from salicylic acid and acetic anhydride, but the reaction may be incomplete or impure resulting in residual salicylic acid. The document describes how titrating samples of pure salicylic acid, acetylsalicylic acid, synthesized aspirin, and commercial aspirin tablets with a standardized sodium hydroxide solution allows calculation of the effective molar mass. This value reveals the sample's purity based on the different molar masses of salicylic acid and acetylsalicylic acid. The procedure is intended to compare the purity of the synthesized aspirin to pure standards and commercial aspirin tablets.
This document provides instructions for determining the purity of aspirin through acid-base titration. Aspirin is synthesized from salicylic acid and acetic anhydride, but the reaction may be incomplete or impure resulting in residual salicylic acid. The document describes how titrating samples of pure salicylic acid, acetylsalicylic acid, synthesized aspirin, and commercial aspirin tablets with a standardized sodium hydroxide solution allows calculation of the effective molar mass. This value reveals the sample's purity based on the different molar masses of salicylic acid and acetylsalicylic acid. The procedure is intended to compare the purity of the synthesized aspirin to pure standards and commercial aspirin tablets.
This document provides instructions for determining the purity of aspirin through acid-base titration. Aspirin is synthesized from salicylic acid and acetic anhydride, but the reaction may be incomplete or impure resulting in residual salicylic acid. The document describes how titrating samples of pure salicylic acid, acetylsalicylic acid, synthesized aspirin, and commercial aspirin tablets with a standardized sodium hydroxide solution allows calculation of the effective molar mass. This value reveals the sample's purity based on the different molar masses of salicylic acid and acetylsalicylic acid. The procedure is intended to compare the purity of the synthesized aspirin to pure standards and commercial aspirin tablets.
This document provides instructions for determining the purity of aspirin through acid-base titration. Aspirin is synthesized from salicylic acid and acetic anhydride, but the reaction may be incomplete or impure resulting in residual salicylic acid. The document describes how titrating samples of pure salicylic acid, acetylsalicylic acid, synthesized aspirin, and commercial aspirin tablets with a standardized sodium hydroxide solution allows calculation of the effective molar mass. This value reveals the sample's purity based on the different molar masses of salicylic acid and acetylsalicylic acid. The procedure is intended to compare the purity of the synthesized aspirin to pure standards and commercial aspirin tablets.
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Aspirin purity by Titration
Purpose of this Experiment:
• To determine the purity of synthesized aspirin sample by acid-base titration, and to compare the results with those from pure salicylic acid, acetylsalicylic acid, and with commercial aspirin tablets. Aspirin uses • an analgesic (pain-killer) • antipyretic (fever-reducer)
It has mild short-term analgesic effect,
long-range benefits, including reducing the probability of users' suffering heart attacks and colon cancer. • In the nineteenth century, chemists isolated salicylic acid from willow twigs and showed that it was the effective ingredient. • Pure salicylic acid is very damaging to the stomach, and the acetyl derivative was prepared in order to reduce this undesirable side effect. • Acetylsalicylic acid has become the most extensively used pharmaceutical product in the world • On standing for prolonged periods of time in a humid atmosphere, aspirin tablets develop a vinegary smell due to the hydrolysis of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) to form salicylic acid (SA). • A hydrolysis is a reaction with water to break one or more bonds. In this case, the acetyl group comes off as acetic acid, which causes the vinegary smell. • In this exercise, we will determine by acid-base titration the amounts of ASA and SA in a synthesized sample of aspirin. • Incomplete reaction or inadequate washing of the product are likely to have left the ASA contaminated with some SA. • The same titration process can be used to determine ASA content in commercial aspirin tablets. • We will make use of the effective molar mass of the synthesized samples to assay their content, but we will also take note of the overall titration curve (see below) for confirmation of our conclusions. This can be done for both the synthesized sample and the tablets. • SA and ASA have significantly different molar masses. If we titrate the same weight of the two acids with base, it will take more base to reach the endpoint with salicylic acid, since there will be more mmoles of acid in the sample due to its lower molar mass. A mixture will require an intermediate amount of base. • It can also be seen from the data above that SA is a stronger acid. The K a of a weak acid is the equilibrium constant for the reaction in which the acid dissociates in water. A smaller value indicates less dissociation and therefore a weaker acid. SA is about 40 times stronger than ASA, and we can detect this if we look at titration curves of the two acids. • A titration curve is a plot of the pH of a solution of the acid as a function of the amount of base added. The stronger acid will produce a more acidic solution (lower pH) in the lower region of the curve prior to complete neutralization. • The figure below illustrates calculated titration curves for 300 mg of pure SA and 300 mg of pure ASA with 0.1 M NaOH. Remember that the pH at the point of half-neutralization is equal to the pKa of the acid. Procedures 1- Accurately (on the analytical balance) weigh out ~0.2 g samples of SA, ASA, and each of your synthesized aspirin samples. 2. Dissolve each sample in 10 mL of 95% ethanol stirring vigorously. When the sample is completely dissolved, add 90 mL of distilled water, and stir the solution again. 3- Add two or three drops of phenolphthalein indicator to each solution and titrate with the standardized sodium hydroxide solution provided. (The concentration is about 0.05 M. Record the precise value in your notebook and on the data sheet.) Determine the endpoint carefully by looking for formation of a persistent light pink color. • 5. Calculate the effective molar mass (EMM) of each sample, using the data sheet as a guide. • The EMM is the mass of sample in mg which produces one mmole of H+ ions upon titration. • For a pure compound with one acid group per molecule, this should be the actual molar mass of the compound. For a mixture, this will be a weighted average of the molar masses of the acid components. • 6. If the sample consists only of ASA and SA, then the percent composition can be derived from the EMM according to the relationships: • %SA = 100 ( 180.15 - EMM ) / ( 180.15 - 138.12 ) = 2.379 ( 180.15 - EMM ) %ASA= 100 ( EMM - 138.12 ) / ( 180.15 - 138.12 ) = 2.379 ( EMM - 138.12 ) • Calculate the % composition of your sample. • Note that the relationship between percent composition and EMM applies to mixtures containing only SA and ASA! If the measured EMM is greater than 180.15 or less than 138.12, the above formulas do not apply. Simply report that the EMM was out of the possible range and assume the sample consists of 100% SA or ASA, whichever is appropriate. • If your EMM for pure SA or pure ASA differs from the expected value by more than 10%, you should repeat that titration before proceeding to the next part.