potenciometrie
Potentiometry is a branch of electrochemistry that measures the electric potential of an electrochemical cell to determine the activity of ions in a solution, without drawing significant current. The measurement relies on a sensing electrode whose potential responds to the target ion and a reference electrode that provides a stable, known potential. The pair is connected to a high-impedance voltmeter to ensure that virtually no current flows.
The principle is based on the Nernst equation, which relates the measured potential to the activity (effective
Techniques and applications include pH measurement, general ion-selective electrode measurements, and potentiometric titration. In potentiometric titration,
Calibration and limitations are important considerations. Readings depend on ion activity and require temperature control and