I'm doing a practical on finding out the percentage of acetylsalicylic acid in aspirin tablets. I know exactly how to carry out the calculations, only my final answer is over 100% which is obviously wrong. Either my lab results are incorrect, or there's something I'm missing.
I did this using back titration. I poured 25 ml^3 NaOH and the same amount of distilled water onto 1.46 grams of aspirin tablets. After hydrolising (heating it on a burner for 10 minutes), I poured the unused NaOH into a 250 ml^3 flask and made up to mark with distilled water. Then I titrated 25 ml^3 of that solution against HCl of .1 [M] to figure out the volume of that unused NaOH, so I can substract it from the original amount and from an equation find out how much acetylsalicylic acid was used.
My experiment came out to an average of 1.1 ml^3 of HCl. Since the ratio between the two is 1:1, the moles of HCl are .1 x .0011 = .00011, which = the moles of unused NaOH. There was originally .025 moles of NaOH in the solution, therefore .025-.00011=.02489 moles of NaOH were used up in the hydrolysis. From the original equation, the ratio between NaOH and acetylsalicylic acid is 2:1, so that amount of moles / 2 = .012445 moles of the acid. To find the mass, I multiplied that by 180 (molar mass of the acid) and got 2.24. However, the original mass of the aspirin was 1.46! How can I end up with more than i started? What am I doing wrong?