Fajans method, also known as the adsorption indicator method, is used for determining halide ions (Cl⁻, Br⁻, I⁻) and other anions like thiocyanate (SCN⁻).
It uses silver nitrate (AgNO₃) as the titrant and an adsorption indicator, such as fluorescein, to detect the endpoint based on color change.
Principle of Fajans Method:
Halide ions precipitate with silver ions to form silver halide: Ag+ + X− → AgX(s)
After all halide ions react with silver, the excess silver ions adsorb the indicator onto the surface of the precipitate, causing a color change that signals the endpoint.
Procedure:
Pipette a known volume of the halide-containing solution into an Erlenmeyer flask.
Add distilled water to dilute the sample.
Add 2-3 drops of an adsorption indicator (e.g., fluorescein), which gives the solution a yellow or pale color.
Slowly titrate with standardized AgNO₃, forming a white or pale precipitate of silver halide.
Continue titrating until a faint pink or reddish color appears, indicating the endpoint.
Theory:
The endpoint is determined by the adsorption of the indicator on the precipitate surface, which causes a visible color change.
As halide concentration decreases, excess silver ions adsorb the indicator, leading to the color change that signals the endpoint.