Greetings,
I have following problem and I would be grateful to hear some responses/followup questions to following question:
I have some leftover liquid from wood heating process. This stuff is mostly (around 99%) water, but might have some ethanol and methanol in it (somewhere around 0-1% each). I should be able to determine water fraction of this liquid. Uncertainty of determined water fraction can be rather high, it is important to know approximate magnitude of other components, i.e is there around 0.1%-1% or less ethanol and/or methanol.
Obvious thing to do is mass spectroscopy, but being rather time consuming and expensive, I started to think something else:
I have ph/conductivity-meter in my lab, so could I somehow turn methanol and ethanol to (some) acids and by measuring Ph of solution, I could approximately calculate how much there was alcohols to begin with?
So, could I turn these alcohols into acids somehow? How could I do that? Could there be a better way to determine approximate water fraction?
Even my question might be silly, I have some experience as a physisit/engineer in lab, but unfortunately I still lack understanding in Chemistry.
-PineMarten