Abstract
Accurate and cost-effective methods for the analysis of oxychlorine compounds in water are critical to modern chlorine-based water treatment. With alternatives to elemental chlorine and hypochlorite bleaches growing in popularity, simple quantification methods for the disinfectant chlorine dioxide (ClO2) in water, as well as chlorite (ClO2-) and chlorate (ClO3-), which are commonly used precursors in ClO2 generation, are required. However, currently, regulated standard methods require specialized equipment and do not effectively discriminate between molecular and ionic species. In this contribution, we present a simple titration-based method for chlorite determination in water using commercially available and easy-to-handle reagents. Specifically, chlorite is reduced with a slight excess of thioureadioxide (TUD). The remaining reductant is then back-titrated against a known amount of potassium permanganate, affording calculatable chlorite concentrations through measured consumption of a reductant and a clear visual endpoint upon accumulation of excess KMnO4. Straightforward methods for chlorite standardization with reasonable error and accuracy for field and/or lab application have the potential to greatly enhance quality assurance and therefore assist in resource deployment in water treatment.
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