Question:

Which plot represents a spectrophotometric titration, where the titrant alone absorbs light in the visible region? 

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In spectrophotometric titrations, a sharp change in absorbance at the endpoint indicates a significant reaction between the titrant and analyte.
Updated On: Dec 14, 2025
  • (A)
  • (B)
  • (C)
  • (D)
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The Correct Option is A

Solution and Explanation

Spectrophotometric titration where titrant alone absorbs:

Key conditions:

  • Titrant absorbs light in the visible region
  • Analyte (substance being titrated) does NOT absorb
  • Product formed does NOT absorb

Expected behavior:

Before endpoint:

  • Titrant is consumed by reaction with analyte
  • No excess titrant present
  • Absorbance remains low/constant (near zero)

At endpoint:

  • All analyte has reacted
  • Any additional titrant added remains in solution

After endpoint:

  • Excess titrant accumulates in solution
  • Absorbance increases linearly with added titrant volume
  • Slope depends on titrant concentration and molar absorptivity

Analyzing the plots:

(A):

  • Low constant absorbance before endpoint
  • Sharp increase at endpoint
  • Linear increase after endpoint
  • Matches expected behavior 

(B):

  • High initial absorbance
  • Decrease at endpoint
  • Suggests analyte absorbs (opposite scenario) 

(C):

  • Increasing absorbance before endpoint
  • Plateau after endpoint
  • Suggests product absorbs (different scenario) 

(D):

  • Triangular peak at endpoint
  • Not consistent with titrant absorption behavior 

Answer: (A) 

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