RalphLambrecht
Subscriber
To protect the electrode of my pH meter, I keep it in a self-made, 3-mol potassium-chloride buffer solution. It has been it for about a year, and the only thing I've ever noticed in the past was a large (1-inch square) crystal forming in the buffer solution.
I recently went on a vacation for 3 weeks, turning off the heating while I was gone. The house got as cold as 12C but not less than that. When I came back, I noticed that the pH meter and the container it sits in (holding the buffer solution), looked like frozen over, KCl everywhere. The pH meter and the container were covered.
What happened, and how can this be prevented?
I recently went on a vacation for 3 weeks, turning off the heating while I was gone. The house got as cold as 12C but not less than that. When I came back, I noticed that the pH meter and the container it sits in (holding the buffer solution), looked like frozen over, KCl everywhere. The pH meter and the container were covered.
What happened, and how can this be prevented?