Measuring Formaldehyde Concentration: The Role of NaOH

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To measure the concentration of formaldehyde in a diluted solution, a wet chemistry method is recommended, utilizing common chemicals. The procedure involves mixing iodine, sodium hydroxide, and the sample solution, allowing it to sit before adding sulfuric acid and titrating with sodium thiosulfate. A starch solution serves as an indicator during titration. The concentration of formaldehyde can be calculated using a specific formula based on the volumes of sodium thiosulfate used in both the sample and a blank titration. The concentration of sodium hydroxide used in the procedure is important, with 1.0 M being suitable. The discussion also touches on the availability of more advanced instrumentation like Gas Chromatography, although the focus remains on achieving a simple and quick method with acceptable accuracy.
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Hello all,

In order to re-use formaldehyde from a dilluted solution (in water) I need to know the concentration of formaldehyde in the dilluted solution.
Can anyone tell me how to measure this concentration? It does not have to be very accurate.

thanks in advance,
Albert
 
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Hi biobird -

I'm not sure what equipment you have available to you, but here's a wet chemistry method that uses commonly available chemicals. It's from a commonly used test method to measure HCHO from wood products.

You'll need the following solutions:

0.05 M iodine
0.1 M sodium thiosulfate
1.0 M sulfuric acid
starch solution ~1%

Mix 25ml iodine + 10ml NaOH + 20ml of the solution you're testing. Let it sit 15 minutes away from light. Add 15ml H2SO4 and titrate immediately with the Na2S2O3. When the solution starts to become pale yellow add a few drops of starch solution as an indicator.

Do the same titration procedure on 20ml water (blank).

Calculate the HCHO concentration:

c[HCHO] = (Vo – V) * 750 * c[Na2S2O3]

Where

Vo = volume of Na2S2O3 used in blank titration, in ml
V = volume of Na2S2O3 used titrating the solution you're testing, in ml
c[Na2S2O3] = concentration of sodium thiosulfate in M (0.1 in this case)
c[HCHO] = concentration of HCHO in mg/L
 
Hello Lisab,

Thank you very much for your description of this procedure.
I will try it soon.
Does the concentration of the NaOH matter?

greetings, Albert
 
Also what kind of instrumentations do you have e.g. Gas Chromatography ?
 
Well, I guess we have this kind of instruments at the lab, but I never worked with it. I was actually looking for a quick and simple method with an accuracy of -let's say- plus/minus 0.5 percent. After all, I'm just a simple biologist:confused:
 
biobird said:
Hello Lisab,

Thank you very much for your description of this procedure.
I will try it soon.
Does the concentration of the NaOH matter?

greetings, Albert

Ooops, left that out!

1.0 M NaOH will do.
 
hi. may i know why NaOH has to be added? - just asking!

thnks
 
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