What Is Karl Fischer Testing? Moisture Analysis Method & Applications

Written by Dr. Bhargav Raval | Updated: April 6, 2026

What Is Karl Fischer Testing? Moisture Analysis Method & Applications

Written by Dr. Bhargav Raval |  Updated: April 6, 2026

What Is Karl Fischer Testing?

Karl Fischer (KF) titration is the definitive analytical method for determining water content in solid, liquid, and gaseous materials. Developed by Karl Fischer in 1935, it remains the gold standard for moisture determination — offering specificity for water (as opposed to total volatile content), sensitivity from ppm to percentage levels, and applicability to virtually every material type.

Karl Fischer testing is mandatory quality control in the polymers, lubricants, electronics, solvents, and coatings industries, wherever moisture content directly affects product performance, processability, safety, or shelf life.

The Chemistry Behind Karl Fischer Titration

The Karl Fischer reaction involves the oxidation of sulphur dioxide by iodine in the presence of water:

H₂O + I₂ + SO₂ + 3 base + methanol → [base·H]SO₄CH₃ + 2 [base·H]I

Water is stoichiometrically consumed in this reaction — one mole of water reacts with one mole of iodine. The endpoint is detected when excess (unreacted) iodine is present, indicated by a colour change (visual endpoint) or an electrochemical signal (potentiometric endpoint in modern instruments).

Karl Fischer Methods

Volumetric Karl Fischer (One-Component and Two-Component)

One-component KF reagent (Hydranal-Composite): Single reagent containing all components,s including iodine, SO₂, base, and solvent. Used for routine moisture analysis of liquids and dissolution solids.

Two-component KF reagent: Separate iodine solution (titrant) and SO₂/base/solvent solution (working medium) — used when the single-component reagent’s solvent is not compatible with the sample. Suitable for water-in-oil and water-in-hydrocarbon determinations.

Range: Volumetric KF is suited for water contents of 0.1% to 100% by weight.

Coulometric Karl Fischer

Instead of adding iodine from a burette, coulometric KF generates iodine electrochemically at an anode by oxidation of iodide (I⁻ → I₂ + 2e⁻). Faraday’s law directly relates the electrical charge used to the moles of iodine generated (and therefore to moles of water consumed). Coulometric KF achieves detection limits of 1–10 µg of water, orders of magnitude more sensitive than volumetric KF.

Range: Best for water contents of 1 ppm to 5% by weight.

KF with Oven (Thermostep / Evaporation Method)

Samples that cannot be dissolved in KF reagent (solid polymers, insoluble materials) or that contain interfering compounds are heated in an oven. Evolved water vapor is carried by dry inert gas into the KF titration cell. This separates water from the matrix before measurement — preventing matrix interference.

Industrial Applications of Karl Fischer Testing

Polymers and Plastics

Hygroscopic polymers (nylons, PET, polycarbonate, PMMA, polyurethane) must be dried below specific moisture levels before injection moulding or extrusion — excess moisture causes hydrolytic degradation, splay defects, and loss of molecular weight. The KF oven method verifies pre-processing moisture content per material specification limits.

Lubricants and Hydraulic Fluids

Water in lubricants accelerates oxidative degradation, promotes corrosion, and supports bacterial growth. ASTM D6304 (coulometric KF for petroleum products) verifies that lubricant water content meets specification limits — typically <200–500 ppm. Transformer oil water content determination (ASTM D1533) using KF governs transformer dielectric strength limits.

Solvents and Chemical Intermediates

Research-grade and electronic-grade solvents require water content below specified limits (often <30–100 ppm) to prevent moisture-sensitive reactions and contamination of moisture-sensitive processes. Coulometric KF provides the necessary sensitivity for ppm-level verification of solvent moisture.

Electronic Materials and Components

Moisture in polymer packaging materials, adhesives, and underfill systems directly governs the moisture sensitivity level (MSL) of electronic assemblies before solder reflow. KF (ASTM D6304, IPC-TM-650 2.6.28) verifies moisture content to support MSL classification and incoming material release decisions.

Conclusion

Karl Fischer titration is the most accurate and reliable method for measuring water content across a wide range of materials. Its high specificity for water, broad measurement range, and adaptability to different sample types make it indispensable for quality control, process optimisation, and product reliability. By enabling precise moisture determination — from ppm to percentage levels — Karl Fischer testing plays a critical role in preventing material degradation, ensuring compliance with specifications, and maintaining performance in moisture-sensitive applications.

Why Choose Infinita Lab for Karl Fischer Moisture Testing?

Infinita Lab provides volumetric KF, coulometric KF, and KF oven method moisture testing for polymers, lubricants, solvents, electronics materials, and industrial chemicals through our nationwide accredited analytical chemistry laboratory network.

Looking for a trusted partner to achieve your research goals? Schedule a meeting with us, send us a request, or call us at (888) 878-3090 to learn more about our services and how we can support you.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is the difference between volumetric and coulometric Karl Fischer titration?

Volumetric KF adds a known-concentration iodine solution from a burette — suitable for water contents above 0.1%. Coulometric KF generates iodine in-situ electrochemically — detecting as little as 1–10 µg of water, making it ideal for ppm-level moisture in lubricants, solvents, and electronic materials. Coulometric KF is inherently more sensitive; volumetric KF is more practical for higher moisture levels.

What interfering substances affect Karl Fischer results?

Ketones and aldehydes react with methanol in KF reagent to form acetals, releasing water and giving falsely high results. Oxidising agents (peroxides, chromates) oxidise iodide to iodine, giving high results. Reducing agents (sulphites, thiols) consume iodine, giving low results. For interfering matrices, the oven evaporation method physically separates water from interferents before measurement.

What is the Karl Fischer oven method and when is it used?

The KF oven method heats a solid or insoluble sample to drive off its moisture as vapor, which is swept into a KF titration cell by dry carrier gas. It is used when: (1) the sample does not dissolve in KF solvent, (2) interfering substances are present in the sample, or (3) the sample contains strongly bound water that does not release at room temperature. Oven temperature is selected to fully release water without pyrolytic degradation of the matrix.

What ASTM standard governs Karl Fischer moisture testing of petroleum products?

ASTM D6304 — Standard Test Method for Determination of Water in Petroleum Products, Lubricating Oils, and Additives by Coulometric Karl Fischer Titration — is the primary standard for petroleum and lubricant moisture analysis. ASTM D1533 governs KF water determination in electrical insulating oils (transformer oil).

How is Karl Fischer testing calibrated and how is accuracy verified?

KF instruments are calibrated using certified water standards — either sodium tartrate dihydrate (certified 15.66% water, primary standard for volumetric KF) or certified water standard solutions at known ppm levels (for coulometric KF). Daily calibration verification with these standards confirms instrument response factor accuracy. Results traceable to calibrated water standards are required for ISO/IEC 17025 accredited moisture testing.

ABOUT AUTHOR

Dr. Bhargav Raval is a Materials Scientist and Client Engagement Engineer with expertise in nanomaterials, polymers, and advanced material characterization. He holds a Ph.D. in Nanosciences from the Central University of Gujarat, where his research focused on graphene-based materials for flexible electronics. Professionally, he has led R&D in sensor technologies and coatings, including polymer-functionalized piezoelectric sensors for breath-based cancer diagnostics. In his current role, Dr. Raval works closely with clients to understand technical requirements, design testing strategies, and deliver tailored solutions in materials selection, failure analysis, and performance evaluation. He effectively bridges scientific depth with practical outcomes, ensuring client-focused project execution. With peer-reviewed publications in high-impact journals and a proven record of applying materials science to real-world challenges, Dr. Raval continues to drive innovation at the intersection of research, engineering, and client engagement.
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