What I would really like to do is start amassing equipment needed for some routine quantitative analyses. I've done many titrations in my life and volumetric analysis is what I know best, but I'd like if possible to develop methods that are more specific and more apt to automation. Titration with coulometric generation of reagents seems like it might be a feasible amateur project.
I've done volumetric analysis at home. For fun. Burets are fairly easy to get online ($20 will get you a serviceable 50 mL model) but availability of pure reagents for use as "primary standards" (for standardization of volumetric reagent solutions) is nonexistent to the private citizen. I taught myself to prepare and recrystallize a number of inorganic compounds in order to do my work.
Acidimetric titrations are a bit more work to prepare for. HCl solutions made from hardware-store muriatic acid are easily prepared, but standardization is more difficult. I had best luck with:
Sodium tetraborate decahydrate (prepared by recrystallization of commercial borax at 55 °C, and stored in a container with a high humidity to suppress efflorescence)
Sodium carbonate (prepared by baking out sodium sesquicarbonate prep'd by crystallizing a hot NaHCO3 solution)
#chemistry
What I really would have liked were some alternatives for acidimetric standards. "Tris" base, tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane, is a good one but not easily made at home! Another I found out about was 4-aminopyridine, also inaccessible. I tried and failed to synthesize potassium bicarbonate by passing CO2 gas into a K2CO3 solution.