I have a way, which is to measure the percentage of carbon in the solution and then dissolve an organic matter weighing 10, 20 and 30 grams in a new solution and also measure the carbon present in it and make a scheme to find in the end the amount of organic matter in the original solutions
I have a way, which is to measure the percentage of carbon in the solution and then dissolve an organic matter weighing 10, 20 and 30 grams in a new solution and also measure the carbon present in it and make a scheme to find in the end the amount of organic matter in the original solutions
Omar Aljubouri Thank you for your answer. Already we try to adjust activate carbon to remove organic matters. However we can't use that method because of economical issues. if you have any other method, could you recommend?
Probably organic matter can be oxidized by potassium dichromate (K2Cr2O7). That is why most soil laboratory uses K2Cr2O7 to oxidize the organic matter. In this case, unreacted K2Cr2O7 can be back titrated with Mohr's salt to know the amount of organic matter.