Science Outreach

Science Outreach

Determination of Calcium Ion Concentration

Introduction

This method, called a complexometric titration, is used to find the calcium content of milk, the ‘hardness’ of water and the amount of calcium carbonate in various solid materials.

The method uses a very large molecule called EDTA which forms a complex with calcium ions. EDTA stands for ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid. A blue dye called Patton and Reeder’s indicator (PR) is used as the indicator. This blue dye also forms a complex with the calcium ions changing colour from blue to pink/red in the process, but the dye–metal ion complex is less stable than the EDTA–metal ion complex. As a result, when the calcium ion–PR complex is titrated with EDTA the Ca2+ ions react to form a stronger complex with the EDTA.

For the titration, the indicator is added to the sample solution containing the calcium ions and forms the pink/red calcium ion-indicator complex (Ca-PR). This solution is then titrated with EDTA. The endpoint occurs when the solution turns blue, indicating that the Ca-PR complex has been completely replaced by the calcium ion-EDTA complex and the PR indicator reverts to its blue colour.

The reaction is:

Ca-PR + EDTA4- --> PR + [Ca-EDTA]2-

Note: Ca-PR is pink/red and PR is blue.

Method

To download a printable version of this experiment (in pdf format) use the link below.

Calcium (PDF 235Kb)

Please note that Outreach support for these experiments is limited to NZ school students and teachers, and we are unable to answer queries from overseas.