I know acid is Säuren in German so I got it, not without problems at first
You don't have to put all mass balances into your system of equations. You may safely assume that water concentration is constant and the only mass balance required is that of acetate/acetic acid:
[CH
3COOH] + [CH
3COO
-] = const
(const must be sum of both initial concentrations of acetic acid and acetate). Note that it is identical to carbon mass balance. Compare with - say - hydrogen balance:
4[CH
3COOH] + 3[CH
3COO
-] + [H
+] + [OH
-] + 2[H
2O] = const
In most cases you don't have to use mass balances for every element, just like you don't have to balance every element separately when balancing reaction equations - say, you just balance SO
42-, not S and then O.
However, I did something wrong, I haven't mentioned very important charge balance:
[CH
3COO
-] + [OH
-] = [H
+] + [Me
+]
where Me
+ is a cation entered into solution with the acetate. Looks to me like 5 equations/5 unknowns mentioned earlier won't work - probably out of three (C, H, O) there are only two independent mass balances, and third is some combination of these two, sorry about that.
See
introduction to acid/base equilibrium calculation. In your case set of equations is:
[CH
3COOH] + [CH
3COO
-] = const
[CH
3COO
-] + [OH
-] = [H
+] + [Me
+]
[OH
-][H
+] = K
w[CH
3COO
-][H
+]/[CH
3COOH] = K
aThere are four unknowns and four equations; fifth unknown was water (it is now hidden in the K
w; see
water ion product). Solving it will be hard, browse my lectures to see ideas about how to deal with such problems.