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To plot the calibration curve, you need to prepare iron solutions with known concentrations and measure their absorbance.

You will obtain a standard iron solution containing[ 0.2500g/L] of pure iron. Pipet 25.00mL of this standard iron solution into a 500mL volumetric flask and dilute up to the mark with distilled water. Finally, you will pipet certain amounts of this diluted solution into different flasks.

How much of this diluted solution do you need to pipet to have 0.00mg of iron?

Answer :

To plot the calibration curve, you need to prepare iron solutions with known concentrations and measure their absorbance. You need to pipet 0 mL of the diluted solution to have 0.00 mg of iron.

In spectrophotometry, to plot the calibration curve, you need to prepare solutions with known concentrations and measure their absorbance.

We have a standard iron solution with a concentration of 0.2500g/L of pure iron (C₁). We pipet 25.00mL (V₁) of this standard iron solution into a 500mL (V₂) volumetric flask and dilute up to the mark with distilled water.

We can calculate the concentration of the diluted solution (C₂) using the dilution rule.

[tex]C_1 \times V_1 = C_2 \times V_2\\\\C_2 = \frac{C_1 \times V_1}{V_2} = \frac{0.2500 g/L \times 25.00 mL}{500 mL} = 0.0125 g/L[/tex]

Then, if we wanted to prepare the blank, that is, the solution that contains the same matrix but not the analyte, and whose concentration in iron is 0.00 mg/L, we wouldn't pipet any of the diluted solution.

To plot the calibration curve, you need to prepare iron solutions with known concentrations and measure their absorbance. You need to pipet 0 mL of the diluted solution to have 0.00 mg of iron.

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