Assay
Summary of the USP sodium chloride Assay
The Assay in the USP sodium chloride monograph is a quantitative argentometric titration that determines the actual content of NaCl in the sample.
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Purpose: Confirm that bulk sodium chloride contains 99.0%–100.5% NaCl on the dried basis, ensuring correct potency for use in formulations.
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Principle:
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A known mass of sodium chloride is dissolved in water.
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The chloride is titrated with standardized 0.1 N silver nitrate solution.
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The reaction is:
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The endpoint is detected potentiometrically (using an indicator electrode and reference electrode), avoiding visual indicators and giving a precise equivalence point.
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Calculation:
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Each mL of 0.1 N AgNO3 corresponds to 5.844 mg of NaCl.
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From the titrant volume and sample weight, the percentage of NaCl is calculated and compared to the 99.0%–100.5% specification.
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Step‑by‑step lab procedure (USP‑style argentometric assay)
Use this as a practical, lab‑ready version. For GMP/QC work, follow your official USP text/SOP exactly for masses, volumes, and instrument settings.
Practical tips for a robust assay
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Standardization of AgNO3:
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Always standardize your 0.1 N silver nitrate solution (e.g., against a primary NaCl standard) before use. Small errors in normality directly translate into assay bias.
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Electrode performance:
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Condition the silver electrode according to the manufacturer’s instructions (e.g., soaking in dilute AgNO3 or NaCl solution).
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Check for a smooth, monotonic titration curve; noisy or flat responses often indicate a dirty or failing electrode.
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Stirring and mixing:
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Maintain constant, gentle stirring throughout the titration. Poor mixing can cause local supersaturation of AgCl and noisy potential jumps.
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Blank and control checks:
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Run a blank titration (water plus any auxiliary reagents, no NaCl) to confirm that background chloride is negligible.
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Periodically assay a reference NaCl sample to verify system performance and method precision.
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Light and precipitation:
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Silver salts are light‑sensitive; keep AgNO3 solutions in amber glass and minimize strong light exposure during titration.
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If heavy AgCl crust forms on the electrode, gently clean it between runs to maintain reproducible response.
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Cautions and safety notes
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Silver nitrate hazards:
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AgNO3 is oxidizing and corrosive and causes persistent brown/black stains on skin and clothing. Wear gloves, goggles, and a lab coat; rinse spills on skin immediately with plenty of water.
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Nitric acid and other acids:
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If your lab’s SOP uses nitric acid for standardization or electrode conditioning, treat it as highly corrosive and use appropriate PPE and fume hood practices.
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Waste disposal:
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Silver‑containing waste (AgNO3 solutions, AgCl precipitate, rinses) should be collected as hazardous waste and disposed of according to your institution’s environmental and regulatory procedures—do not pour it down the drain.
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Glassware and breakage:
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Handle electrodes and burettes carefully; they are fragile and expensive. Dispose of broken glass in designated sharps containers.
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