Technical Bulletin 517 - Total Alkalinity Measurement in Natural Waters
Technical Bulletin 517 - Total Alkalinity Measurement in Natural Waters
Technical Bulletin 517 - Total Alkalinity Measurement in Natural Waters
Conventional Ways to Alkalinity is measured commonly by titration, using either a burette or the drop count technique.
Measure Alkalinity A sample is titrated with an acid solution, which neutralizes the alkaline species present. The
endpoint is determined by observing a color change or by titrating to a pH value of 4.5, using
a pH electrode as an indicator. The volume of titrant required to change the color to reach the
endpoint is then used to calculate total alkalinity. Both methods have limitations. Sample color
or turbidity affects the operator’s ability to detect the color change. Use of a burette or dropper is
tedious and time-consuming.
Fast and Easy Alternative to The Thermo Scientific Orion total alkalinity test kit simplifies routine alkalinity measurement.
Measure Alkalinity Save time by eliminating additional equipment setup, tedious titrations and calculations. The
total alkalinity test kit is ideal for field use. Results are unaffected by sample color or turbidity,
and the kit does not require tedious drop counting.
• No titration needed
Using your own pH electrode and pH meter, measure total alkalinity directly. Just calibrate for
pH as usual, add the total alkalinity reagent and read total alkalinity in ppm as CaCO3 from the
conversion wheel included in the kit.
OBSERVED pH
4.50
4.45
4.40
4.35
4.30
4.25
4.20
70 80 90 100 110
ppm CaCO3
Total Alkalinity Test Kit Find the expected sample concentration range using Chart 1 and use the indicated volumes
Instructions of sample and total alkalinity reagent. If pH must be reported, measure and record the pH of
the sample prior to reagent addition. Follow the instructions below for measurement of total
alkalinity.
1. Calibrate the pH electrode and meter using pH 7 and pH 4 buffers, according to the meter
user guide.
3. Pipette the appropriate amount of total alkalinity reagent into the sample and mix the
solution well. See Chart 1.
5. Using the indicated side of the total alkalinity conversion wheel, find the resulting pH value
and read total alkalinity of sample in ppm as CaCO3.
Chart 1
Chart 2
1. Carefully pipette the appropriate volume of 1,000 ppm standard/control into a clean 100 mL
volumetric flask and dilute to the mark with deionized water. Mix the solution well.
2. Transfer the solution to a clean beaker and add the appropriate volume of total alkalinity
reagent. Mix the solution well.
3. Calibrate the pH electrode and meter using pH 7 and pH 4 buffers, according to the meter
user guide.
1. Recalibrate the pH electrode and meter using fresh buffers. The electrode slope should be
92% to 102%.
3. Check the alkalinity of the deionized water. Any alkalinity in the water used for diluting the
standard will contribute to the total alkalinity measured in the control:
a. Measure the total alkalinity of the deionized water, using the low level procedure, and
multiply the result by 0.9. This value, AH2O, is the contribution to the total alkalinity
from the deionized water.
c. Transfer the solution to a clean beaker, add 10 mL of total alkalinity reagent, and mix
the solution well.
d. Measure the pH of the solution and use the gray side of the conversion wheel to read the
total alkalinity, A.
e. Determine the alkalinity of the control, Ac, using the following formula:
Ac = A - AH2O
700010 Total alkalinity test kit, includes total alkalinity reagent, 1 x 475 mL
bottle; alkalinity standard/control, 1 x 475 mL bottle; and total alkalinity
conversion wheel. Average of 80 tests per kit.
700011 Total alkalinity reagent, 4 x 475 mL bottles
700012 Alkalinity standard/control, 1 x 475 mL bottle