11. Calculate [OH- ] ions in a 0.125 M solution of nitrous acid. Is this solution acidic or basic; how do you know? Make sure you include the ionization equation. (6 marks)
12. Calculate the [H3O+] in a 2.00 L solution of NaOH, a strong base, if it contains 0.800 g of solute. Is this solution acidic or basic; how do you know? Make sure you include the dissociation equation. (6 marks)
11. Calculate [OH−] ions in a 0.125 M solution of nitrous acid. Is this solution acidic or basic; how do you know? Make sure you include the ionization equation.
Solution (11):
Nitrous acid (HNO2) is a weak acid (Ka = 4.5×10−4 for HNO2).
The balanced equation for the ionization of HNO2 is:
HNO2(aq) + H2O(l) ⇌ H3O+(aq) + NO2−(aq)
Summarize the initial conditions, the changes, and the equilibrium conditions in the following ICE table:
Substitute the equilibrium concentrations into the expression for the acid ionization constant Ka:
Solving for x we get:
x = 0.00728
[H3O+] = x = 0.00728 M
Calculate the pH as the negative of the base-10 logarithm of [H3O+]:
pH = −log[H3O+] = −log(0.00728) = 2.14
pH = 2.14, it is less than 7 so this solution is acidic
For any aqueous solution at 25∘C:
[H3O+][OH−] = Kw = 1.0×10−14
Therefore,
[OH−] = Kw / [H3O+] = (1.0×10−14) / (0.00728) = 1.37×10−12
[OH−] = 1.37×10−12 M
Answer (11): [OH−] = 1.37×10−12 M; this solution is acidic
12. Calculate the [H3O+] in a 2.00 L solution of NaOH, a strong base, if it contains 0.800 g of solute. Is this solution acidic or basic; how do you know? Make sure you include the dissociation equation.
Solution (12):
The molar mass of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is 40 g/mol
Therefore,
Moles of NaOH = (0.800 g NaOH) × (1 mol NaOH / 40 g NaOH) = 0.020 mol NaOH
Molarity = Moles of solute / Liters of solution
Therefore,
Molarity of NaOH solution = (0.020 mol) / (2.00 L) = 0.01 mol/L = 0.01 M
Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is a strong base because it almost completely ionized in water.
The balanced equation for the ionization of NaOH is:
NaOH(aq) → Na+(aq) + OH−(aq)
And thus a 0.01 M solution of NaOH is stoichiometric in Na+ and OH−, i.e. [Na+] = [OH−] = 0.01 M
[OH−] = 0.01 M
For any aqueous solution at 25∘C:
[H3O+][OH−] = Kw = 1.0×10−14
Therefore,
[H3O+] = Kw / [OH−] = (1.0×10−14) / (0.01) = 1.0×10−12
[H3O+] = 1.0×10−12 M
Calculate the pH as the negative of the base-10 logarithm of [H3O+]:
pH = −log[H3O+] = −log(1.0×10−12) = 12
pH = 12, it is more than 7 so this solution is basic
Answer (12): [H3O+] = 1.0×10−12 M; this solution is basic
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