Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Related Concept Videos

Titration of Polyprotic Acids with a Strong Base01:23

Titration of Polyprotic Acids with a Strong Base

2.8K
Titration of a polyprotic acid, which contains multiple ionizable protons, involves distinct dissociation steps, each with its own dissociation constant (Ka). Each successive Ka is weaker than the previous one. In the titration of a polyprotic acid like sulfurous acid with a strong base such as sodium hydroxide, the base first neutralizes the initial ionizable proton, forming an intermediate species (e.g., hydrogen sulfite ions). This step's titration curve resembles that of a weak...
2.8K
Titration of a Polyprotic Acid02:08

Titration of a Polyprotic Acid

103.3K
A polyprotic acid contains more than one ionizable hydrogen and undergoes a stepwise ionization process.  If the acid dissociation constants of the ionizable protons differ sufficiently from each other, then the titration curve for such polyprotic acid generates a distinct equivalence point for each of its ionizable hydrogens. Therefore, titration of a diprotic acid results in the formation of two equivalence points, whereas the titration of a triprotic acid results in the formation of three...
103.3K
Titration of a Weak Acid with a Weak Base01:08

Titration of a Weak Acid with a Weak Base

4.8K
Weak acids and bases do not undergo dissociation completely, and titrations between these two are rarely studied. When such studies are performed, say, for the titration of a weak acid with a weak base, the titration curve plots the change in pH as a function of the volume of base added. Take the titration of acetic acid with ammonia, for instance. During the titration, these two species form ammonium acetate and water, but the pH change is slow and gradual.
As a result, there is no simple...
4.8K
Polyprotic Acids03:38

Polyprotic Acids

31.8K
Acids are classified by the number of protons per molecule that they can give up in a reaction. Acids such as HCl, HNO3, and HCN that contain one ionizable hydrogen atom in each molecule are called monoprotic acids. Their reactions with water are:
31.8K
Titration of Polyprotic Base with a Strong Acid01:18

Titration of Polyprotic Base with a Strong Acid

4.7K
The titration of a polyprotic base such as sodium carbonate with a strong acid such as hydrochloric acid results in two equivalence points on the titration curve. At the first equivalence point, the carbonate ions in the base are completely converted to bicarbonate ions. The second equivalence point corresponds to the complete conversion of bicarbonate ions to carbonic acid, which dissociates into carbon dioxide and water. The region before the first equivalence point corresponds to the...
4.7K
Composition of Polyprotic Acid Solutions as a Function of pH01:19

Composition of Polyprotic Acid Solutions as a Function of pH

833
Polyprotic acids of the type H2M constitute two ionizable protons. As a result, on titration with a base, they exhibit two equivalence points in the titration curve. During titration, the species H2M, HM−, and M2− will be present in the solution at different points. The fractions of H2M, HM−, and M2− present at the various instances of the titration are denoted by α0, α1, and α2, respectively.
A graph with the alpha values is plotted against the volume of...
833

You might also read

Related Articles

Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

Sort by
Same author

Transcriptomic profiling of myocardial biopsies reveals metabolic suppression and autophagy activation in systemic sclerosis-associated primary heart involvement.

Journal of scleroderma and related disorders·2026
Same author

Survival after cardiopulmonary arrest due to Capnocytophaga canimorsus sepsis: A case successfully managed using plasma exchange.

IJID regions·2026
Same author

Non-vascular interventional radiology techniques versus video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery in stage II-III empyema: a retrospective cohort study.

Respiratory investigation·2025
Same author

mm2-ivh: simple and precise overlap detection in alpha satellite HORs with interval hashing.

Bioinformatics (Oxford, England)·2025
Same author

Targeted long-read methylation analysis using hybridization capture suitable for clinical specimens.

Cell reports methods·2025
Same author

Salvage Surgery for Lesions Resistant to Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors in a Case Suggestive of Pulmonary Pleomorphic Carcinoma.

Internal medicine (Tokyo, Japan)·2025
Same journal

Inflammasomes in Intestinal Inflammation: Guardians of Mucosal Homeostasis, Amplifiers of Disease, and Targets for Intervention.

Internal medicine (Tokyo, Japan)·2026
Same journal

Late-diagnosed Nonclassical 21-hydroxylase Deficiency in Two Elderly Men with Adrenal Incidentalomas: Clinical Clues to the Underlying Diagnosis.

Internal medicine (Tokyo, Japan)·2026
Same journal

Fish Bone Aspiration Presenting as Chronic Cough and Mimicking Asthma.

Internal medicine (Tokyo, Japan)·2026
Same journal

Successful Alternate-day Osimertinib Administration with Desensitization Following Osimertinib-induced Hepatotoxicity and Neutropenia in a Case of EGFR-mutant Lung Cancer.

Internal medicine (Tokyo, Japan)·2026
Same journal

Marked Hyperbilirubinemia in a Patient with Intrahepatic Cholestasis of Pregnancy and a UGT1A1 Polymorphism: A Case Report.

Internal medicine (Tokyo, Japan)·2026
Same journal

Successful Postpartum CAR T-cell Salvage Therapy for Primary Mediastinal Large B-cell Lymphoma with Residual Disease after R-CHOP During Pregnancy.

Internal medicine (Tokyo, Japan)·2026
See all related articles

Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jan 16, 2026

Optimized Procedure for Determining the Adsorption of Phosphonates onto Granular Ferric Hydroxide using a Miniaturized Phosphorus Determination Method
08:21

Optimized Procedure for Determining the Adsorption of Phosphonates onto Granular Ferric Hydroxide using a Miniaturized Phosphorus Determination Method

Published on: May 18, 2018

15.1K

Alcaptonuria

Mami Kosegawa1, Yoshio Nakano1, Yoshitaka Sakamoto1

  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, Naga Municipal Hospital, Japan.

Internal Medicine (Tokyo, Japan)
|October 1, 2025
PubMed
Summary

No abstract available in PubMed .

Keywords:
alcaptonuriamcongenital metabolic disorder

More Related Videos

Direct Detection of the Acetate-forming Activity of the Enzyme Acetate Kinase
05:51

Direct Detection of the Acetate-forming Activity of the Enzyme Acetate Kinase

Published on: December 19, 2011

23.7K
Removal of Arsenic Using a Cationic Polymer Gel Impregnated with Iron Hydroxide
08:01

Removal of Arsenic Using a Cationic Polymer Gel Impregnated with Iron Hydroxide

Published on: June 28, 2019

7.8K

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: Jan 16, 2026

Optimized Procedure for Determining the Adsorption of Phosphonates onto Granular Ferric Hydroxide using a Miniaturized Phosphorus Determination Method
08:21

Optimized Procedure for Determining the Adsorption of Phosphonates onto Granular Ferric Hydroxide using a Miniaturized Phosphorus Determination Method

Published on: May 18, 2018

15.1K
Direct Detection of the Acetate-forming Activity of the Enzyme Acetate Kinase
05:51

Direct Detection of the Acetate-forming Activity of the Enzyme Acetate Kinase

Published on: December 19, 2011

23.7K
Removal of Arsenic Using a Cationic Polymer Gel Impregnated with Iron Hydroxide
08:01

Removal of Arsenic Using a Cationic Polymer Gel Impregnated with Iron Hydroxide

Published on: June 28, 2019

7.8K