3. Standard manganous sulfate. Dissolve 0.288 gram of purest potassium permanganate in about 100 cc. of distilled water. Acidify the solution with sulfuric acid and heat to boiling. Add slowly a sufficient quantity of dilute solution of oxalic acid to discharge the color. Cool and dilute to 1 liter. One cc. of this solution contains 0.1 mg. of manganese.

4. Ammonium persulfate. Crystals, free from chloride.

Procedure.—Use an amount of the sample that contains not more than 0.2 mg. of manganese. Add 2 cc. of nitric acid and boil down to about 50 cc. Precipitate the chloride with silver nitrate solution, adding at least 1 cc. in excess. Shake and heat to coagulate the precipitate, and filter. A sample that contains much chloride should be evaporated with a few drops of sulfuric acid until white fumes appear and then diluted before the nitric acid and silver nitrate are added as directed above. If the sample is highly colored by organic matter it should be evaporated with sulfuric acid, and the residue ignited and dissolved in dilute nitric acid. Add about 0.5 gram of ammonium persulfate crystals and warm the solution until the maximum permanganate color is developed. This usually takes about ten minutes. At the same time prepare standards by diluting portions of 0.2, 0.4, 0.6 cc., etc. of the standard manganous sulfate solution to about 50 cc. and treating them exactly as the sample was treated. Transfer the sample and the standards to 50 cc. Nessler tubes, and compare the colors immediately. Manganese in parts per million is equal to the number of cubic centimeters of standard manganous sulfate solution in the tube that the sample matches multiplied by 100, divided by the number of cubic centimeters of the sample used.

BISMUTHATE METHOD.[[2a]][[113]]

Reagents.—1. Nitric acid. Dilute 1 part of concentrated nitric acid with 4 parts of distilled water. Free the dilute acid from brown oxides of nitrogen by aeration.

2. Sulfuric acid. Dilute 1 part of concentrated sulfuric acid with 3 parts of distilled water.

3. Dilute sulfuric acid. Dilute 25 cc. of concentrated acid to 1 liter with distilled water. Add enough permanganate solution to color faintly the dilute acid.

4. Standard manganous sulfate. The standard solution of manganous sulfate prepared as described under persulfate method (p. [48]) should be used and the standards should be prepared by following the same procedure as is used for the sample. This solution is more permanent than a solution of potassium permanganate, which may, however, be used. To prepare it dissolve 0.288 gram of potassium permanganate in distilled water and dilute the solution to 1 liter.

5. Sodium bismuthate. Purest dry salt.

Procedure.—Use an amount of the sample that contains not more than 0.2 mg. of manganese. Add 0.5 cc. of sulfuric acid and evaporate to dryness. Heat until the sulfuric acid is volatilized and ignite the residue. Dissolve in 40 cc. of nitric acid, add about 0.5 gram of sodium bismuthate, and heat until the permanganate color disappears. Add a few drops of a solution of ammonium or sodium bisulfate to clear the solution and again boil to expel oxides of nitrogen. Remove from the source of heat, cool to 20° C., again add 0.5 gram of sodium bismuthate, and stir. When the maximum permanganate color has developed, filter through an alundum or Gooch crucible containing an asbestos mat ignited and washed with potassium permanganate. Wash the precipitate with dilute sulfuric acid until the washings are colorless. Transfer the filtrate to a 50 cc. Nessler tube and compare the color of it with that of standards prepared from the potassium permanganate solution. To prepare the standards, dilute portions of 0.2, 0.4, 0.6 cc., etc. of the permanganate solution to 50 cc. with dilute sulfuric acid. The content of manganese is calculated as described under persulfate method (p. [49]).