December 04, 2024, 09:18:42 PM
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Topic: Impact of (aqueous) dissolving ionic compound on the disassociation of water  (Read 4137 times)

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Offline cliverlong

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Consider dissolving an ionic compound such as sodium chloride in water.

Before adding the sodium chloride, the degree of disassociation of water molecule is measured by Kw.

Now, when the salt dissolves we normally think all the sodium and chlorine go to ions in solution, if water is in excess.

Now, does the presence of the Na+ and Cl- have an impact on the degree of disassociation of the water?

If yes, how can we demonstrate this change in Kw?

If no impact on degree disassociation of water, how can we demonstrate that?


Thanks

Clive

Offline Borek

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Debye-Huckel theory and concentration vs thermodynamic dissociation constant is what you are looking for.
ChemBuddy chemical calculators - stoichiometry, pH, concentration, buffer preparation, titrations.info

Offline AWK

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Consider dissolving an ionic compound such as sodium chloride in water.

Before adding the sodium chloride, the degree of disassociation of water molecule is measured by Kw.

Now, when the salt dissolves we normally think all the sodium and chlorine go to ions in solution, if water is in excess.

Now, does the presence of the Na+ and Cl- have an impact on the degree of disassociation of the water?

If yes, how can we demonstrate this change in Kw?

If no impact on degree disassociation of water, how can we demonstrate that?


Thanks

Clive
Use a good pH meter and measure pH of this solution. It should be about 6.87 for 0.2 M NaCl
AWK

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