This month, I have to practice redox and acid-base titrations for the Chemistry Olympiad, using reagents like: Sodium Thiosulfate, Potassium Permanganate, Potassium Dichromate etc. (also using at least 5 uncommon indicators for the acid-base titrations.)
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Today, I worked on titrating Iodine with a solution of Sodium Thiosulfate, using starch as an indicator (adding it after the solution took a pale yellow colour) for noticing the end point.
My problem is determining when I had reached the end point of the titration.
Everything went well until I got really close to the end-point. As I read on my materials and as my teacher said, the solution should be totally be colourless at that point; but as I've seen on some Youtube videos showcasing this titration, their solution wasn't perfectly colourless, but it had a certain 'darker' aspect.
Getting from that aspect to completely colourless took me a significant quantity, so I can't just choose blindly which is the correct variant.
What should I be looking for when doing this titration?
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Along with this one, I worked on determining the concentration of Cu2+ with KI using the procedure shown above.
This one was more troublesome because of the CuI (a whitish yellow precipitate) that really makes me unable to notice the end point.
How should I proceed in this case, so that I can notice the end point?