I am so confused with my chemistry lab right now. We were given the following equations to work with:

[Equation 1] 2 I^- + H2O2 + 2 H^+ ----> I2 + 2 H2O
[Equation 9] 2S2O3^2- + I2 ----> 2I^- +S4O6^2-

And During the Experiment we used the following for each reaction:
T1 | 10 mL of 0.3 M KI | 10mL of 0.02 M Na2S2O3 | 30 mL of 0.1 M H2O2
T2 | 20 mL of 0.3 M KI | 10mL of 0.02 M Na2S2O3 | 30 mL of 0.1 M H2O2
T3 | 30 mL of 0.3 M KI | 10mL of 0.02 M Na2S2O3 | 30 mL of 0.1 M H2O2
T4 | 30 mL of 0.3 M KI | 10mL of 0.02 M Na2S2O3 | 50 mL of 0.1 M H2O2
T5 | 30 mL of 0.3 M KI | 10mL of 0.02 M Na2S2O3 | 70 mL of 0.1 M H2O2

For the lab we also used water, a buffer, and starch in the solutions.

(From lab manual - Calculate the number of moles of S2O3^2- that is consumed in each reaction. Use stoichiometry in equation 9. From equation 9 one-half the moles of S2O3^2- equals the moles of I2 that form in the reaction. Record the moles of I2 formed during the elapsed time)

I have no idea where to start... So, to calculate the number of moles of S2O3^2-, would I have to take 0.02M Na2S2O3 and multiply it by the .010L (10 mL) that we used for the solutions to find the moles - which would be 2 x 10^-4 mol Na2S2O3. But how would I find the amount consumed. Would all of it be consumed in the end? Because in this lab, once all the S2O3^2- is consumed the solution turns dark blue. And how do I find I2. Some help would be really appreciated.

1 answer

All of the numbers run together with no spaces so it's hard to know what you've done. However, equation 1 is a reaction that FORMS I2. To know how much is formed you titrate it with standard S2O3^2-. Yes, mols S2O3^2- = M x L and mols I2 which came from equation 1 will be 1/2 the thiosulfate mols. You titrate all of the I2 with thiosulfate and that's when the starch turns blue. Again, that's the amount of I2 formed from the first reaction.
Similar Questions
    1. answers icon 2 answers
  1. Hi Dr. Bob,I am quite stumped on how to figure out when chemical equations have a REACTION or NO REACTION. I have read the
    1. answers icon 1 answer
  2. Please help me with this chemistry question?I am working on a lab report and I am stuck on this question: Use the concept of
    1. answers icon 1 answer
  3. The question isIs the point (-3, -2) a solution of the intersection of the following set of quadratic equations: Y < -X^2 X^2 +
    1. answers icon 1 answer
more similar questions