I know you can use a pH-meter to determine the pH, but the point of our "fieldwork" is using things you learned in the classroom. And they want us to use a titration to determine the pH of the water.
Sorry to say that, but it means they know nothing about chemistry. General chemistry to be precise, as that's the moment where everyone learns about buffers. You have already adressed one of the problems in your post - need for using insanely diluted reactants. But that's the last thing I will be afraid of.
But I don't see what you mean with "You can't determine pH with titration".
OK, pH = -log[H
+] - that's what you have posted, and (while that's not the whole truth) that will be our starting point.
Your water contains dissolved carbonic acid - you can be sure it does, each solution that is in contact with air contains some dissolved carbon dixoide, which means it contains carbonic acid. Carbonic acid is a weak acid, that is dissociated only partially:
H
2CO
3 <-> H
+ + HCO
3-There is also second step of dissociation, but at pH around 7 it doesn't play any role so we can ignore it for now. Equilibrium of this dissociation is described by acid dissociation constant:
K
a = [H
+][HCO
3-]/[H
2CO
3] = 4.27x10
-7This equation can be rearranged to form
pH = pKa + log([HCO
3-]/[H
2CO
3])
(pKa is just -log(Ka), by analogy to pH) or (using given Ka value)
pH = 6.37 + log([HCO
3-]/[H
2CO
3])
and it is called then
Henderson-Hasselbalch equation.
As you see pH of the solution depends on the ratio of concentrations of carbonic acid and hydrogen carbonate anion. When you add titrant - strong base - to your solution, you are not neutralizing H
+ (in which case you will be able to determine [H
+] and pH). You are neutralizing carbonic acid - thus changing ratio of [HCO
3-]/[H
2CO
3]. However, the higher concentration of carbonic acid, the slower changes in pH. That's so called buffering effect - pH of the solution that contains weak acid and its conjugated base (H
2CO
3 is a weak acid, HCO
3- is its conjugated base) changes very slowly on the addition of bases and/or acids.
Why does it matter? Well - result of your titration won't have ANYTHING to do with the solution pH. You will titrate all buffer systems present in the water - and you can be sure natural water contains not only carbonic buffer, but also some humic acids that'll do their best to keep pH unchanged on addition of titrant. With titration you can - at best - determine buffer capacity of the system.
Let's assume you start with 25 mL of solution containing 0.001M carbon dioxide. That means that sum of concentrations of carbonic acid and hydrogen carbonate is always 0.001M. Let's assume we start with pH 6.00. At this pH concentrations of carbonic acid and hydrogen carbonate are 7x10
-4M and 3x10
-4M (put these numbers into Henderson-Hasselbalch equation to check, note that 7x10
-4M + 3x10
-4M = 0.001M). Now, we want to end our titration at pH 7 - at this pH concentration of carbonic acid will be 1.9x10
-4 and concentration of hydrogen carbonate 8.1x10
-4M (check the numbers again with Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, check if the sum is still OK). To change pH we had to neutralize carbonic acid to change its concentration from 7x10
-4M to 1.9x10
-4M. As the volume was 25 mL we had to add 0.025x(7x10
-4-1.9x10
-4)=1.275x10
-5 mole of strong base.
Now you do the same calculation assuming there is no carbonic acid in the solution - check what will be the final pH of the pH 6.00 solution that contains "only" H
+ once you add 1.275x10
-5 mole of strong base to 25 mL. You see why it won't work?
Read also these pages:
http://www.chembuddy.com/?left=pH-calculation&right=introduction-acid-base-equilibriumhttp://www.chembuddy.com/?left=pH-calculation&right=bronsted-lowry-theory