I think there is some misunderstanding. I am sorry for my language. I will explain my problem again.
My original solution - sodium silicate (10mL) + water (20 mL). While using this solution for some of my experiments, there is some sort of contamination arising (cloudy milky appearance). The reason for this contamination is unknown. Therefore, one of my assumptions is that the contamination is from my sodium silicate solution. I assume that atmospheric carbon dioxide reacts with this sodium silicate solution to form sodium carbonate which now appears as the contamination.
Hence, I want to confirm the presence of this sodium carbonate in my sodium silicate solution and find out the amount using an acid base titration.
The titration I did was with HCl (titrant), and double endpoint with first phenolphthalein indicator and later methyl orange indicator on the same solution.
I got the strength of sodium carbonate as 11g/L and strength of NaOH as 40g/L.
Next I produced some CO2 (mixing citric acid and baking soda) and bubbled it into my original sodium silicate solution. Here I thought that this would accelerate my sodium carbonate presence. But again the strength of sodium carbonate came out to be around 11g/L in the new solution.
So now I infer that the atmospheric carbon dioxide may not have affected the sodium silicate solution at all. But where did the CO2 I bubbled go?
The question on original contamination still remains