I am currently doing a project at school to investigate the effectiveness of different methods of water softening:
- Sodium carbonate
- Boiling (temporary hardness only)
- Calcium hydroxide (temporary hardness only)
- Ion-exchange
- A commerical product: Calgon
After carrying out these methods on individual samples of tap water, I will be using the EDTA titration method to calculate the water hardness (having already calculated it for a non-softened sample).
However, I have just read that supposedly the EDTA method will not work for the sample softened by Calgon (Unfortunately, I've lost the link to the article that suggested this). Calgon works partly by using a complexing agent (citrate-3 ions) which form complexes with calcium and magnesium ions in the hard water (thus removing them from solution). EDTA too acts as a complexing agent, but one that is stronger than the one found in Calgon so EDTA substitutes it! For obvious reasons, I do not want this to happen as it will not give me the correct result.
If this is true, is there a different method of calculating water hardness that I could use?
I apologise if anything I said was incorrect. I'm studying chemistry at A2.