According to the four-element equivalent model, the interest rate and the inflation rate are theoretically related to the expected fluctuation of the spot interest rate. Your job is to examine the empirical evidence related to this claim and to determine whether these theoretical relationships have practical grounds. "Quadruple equivalence model" is the relationship between interest rate and inflation rate, taking into account the expected change in foreign exchange rate and spot exchange rate.
- Each titration curve has four important areas. In other words, it is initial, equilateral, equivalent, posterior equivalent. These points are named according to their position relative to the equivalence point. Equivalent points indicate that the solution will be neutral titrant capacity. This is shown in the figure as a rapid change in pH, rising sharply at first and rapidly decreasing pH. At the first point, no titrant has been added and the pH of the solution is the same as the amount of H + ions originally present in the analyte. At the equivalent time, titrant was added. For this experiment, NaOH (strong base) was added to the weak acid KHP. By adding a strong base to the weak acid, a phenomenon like a buffer occurs and the solution resists dramatic pH changes initially supported by experimental results.
Neutralization is the basis of titration. The pH indicator indicates the position at which the base is added to the acid equivalent to the equivalent acid. It is generally incorrect to assume that neutralization should result in a solution with pH 7.0; this is only the case for strong acid and strong base titration. Titration is the reaction of a specific choice reactant, in this case a strong base and a weak acid. The titration curve reflects the strength of the corresponding acid and base and shows the change in pH during titration. The titration curve shows that the pH change during the titration of a strong base with a strong acid initially shows a very slow and gradual change in pH. This indicates that a buffer system will form when the titration approaches the equivalent point.
The initial pH of the solution at the beginning of the titration is approximately equal to the pH of the weak acid in water. At the equivalent weight, all weak acids are neutralized and converted to their conjugate base (moles of H + = moles of OH -). However, the pH at the equivalence point is not equal to 7. This is due to conjugate bases generated during titration. The resulting solution was slightly alkaline. The end point and the equivalence point are not strictly the same. The equivalence point is determined by the stoichiometry of the reaction and the end point is only the color change of the indicator.