Karl Fischer Water Standards
Thu, 21/04/11 – 15:44 | No Comment

A Word About Karl Fischer Water Standards
Some operators use Karl Fischer water standards daily while others do so sparingly. Regardless of the type of operator you are, there still seems to be some confusion about …

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Titration

Titrations in the petrochemical, Biodiesel or food industries to define oils or fats. Acid-base titrations, Redox titrations

Density/Refractive/Brix

Density and Brix measurements of fruit, drinks, sauces, etc., refractive index and concentration measurement of materials

Surface Analysis

Explores measuring surface tension of liquids and contact angle analysis of solid substrates

Thermal

Concepts of heat flows through material, thermal conductivity of material and Wet bulb Globe Thermometer (WBGT)

Karl Fischer Titration

A form of titration dedicated to measuring Moisture with parts-per-million accuracy – coulometric or volumetric

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Karl Fisher titration; what is drift?

Submitted by Mark on Tuesday, 11 November 2008No Comment

Simply put, drift is background moisture that the is detecting.  What is background moisture?  Well, it is moisture that the Karl Fisher titrator (specifically the detector electrode) is detecting inside the vessel -that’s not coming from your sample.  Drift or moisture can be the result of having the titration vessel sitting idle for some time where moisture has slowly infiltrated and accumulated inside the vessel or it may be a leak that is allowing a small amount of moisture to enter the vessel continually.  Although we might like to think that the Karl Fisher titrator vessel is air-tight/moisture-tight, it is not.  Depending on how well the vessel is sealed there may be a little or there may be a lot of background moisture interference.  All Karl Fisher titrators deal with the drift issue.  Unfortunately drift cannot be completely eliminated but the good news is that it can be reduced, measured, isolated, and discarded from your test results.
Before a single test is run on a Karl Fisher titrator it must go into a “ready” mode.   But before the titrator can go into a “ready” mode it most likely will go through a “pre-titration” mode.  During the “pre-titration” mode excess drift (moisture) is detected and removed by the reagent inside the vessel.  A “ready” mode ideally will occur when the drift being measured is low and steady/stable – usually below .1 micro grams per second.  Once the drift becomes low and stable the Karl Fisher Titrator records the drift level and goes into a “ready” mode and will allow the operator to introduce a sample into the vessel.  Upon completion of the test the Karl Fisher titrator adds up all of the moisture detected over the duration of the test and subtracts out the known drift level that was also measured during the test.  This process of knowing what the drift was before the test allows the Karl Fisher Titrator to then determine and backout the drift -leaving only the moisture detected from the sample as your result.

Jack

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