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Topic: Acid Concentrations frustration  (Read 5063 times)

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Hotoke-sama

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Acid Concentrations frustration
« on: April 04, 2005, 08:18:34 PM »
Hi, im struggling with an Acid Concentration problem.
Part 1. If a solution is measured to have a pH=2.33, what is the concentration of H+ ions?
figured that out, its 4.68x10^-3 M using forumal pH=-log[H+]

second part.
suppose u titrate 10.0ml of the same solution( its a mixute of HNO2 and HNO3) and that you use 10.3mL of a .030-M Sodium Hydroxide solution to reach the end point.   Use these results to find the total acid concentration [HNO2]+[HNO3]

I figured out the first part but the second part is confusing me and I cant find any examples of problems similar to this. Some help would be really appreciated.
« Last Edit: April 04, 2005, 08:20:17 PM by Hotoke-sama »

Offline Donaldson Tan

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Re:Acid Concentrations frustration
« Reply #1 on: April 04, 2005, 11:31:43 PM »
Hi, im struggling with an Acid Concentration problem.
Part 1. If a solution is measured to have a pH=2.33, what is the concentration of H+ ions?
figured that out, its 4.68x10^-3 M using forumal pH=-log[H+]

you are on the right track.

Quote
second part.
suppose u titrate 10.0ml of the same solution( its a mixute of HNO2 and HNO3) and that you use 10.3mL of a .030-M Sodium Hydroxide solution to reach the end point.   Use these results to find the total acid concentration [HNO2]+[HNO3]

since each acid molecule (HNO2 and HNO3) contributes a H+ to the solution, hence the total acid concentration will be the [H+] of the solution.
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Offline Borek

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Re:Acid Concentrations frustration
« Reply #2 on: April 05, 2005, 04:13:41 AM »
since each acid molecule (HNO2 and HNO3) contributes a H+ to the solution, hence the total acid concentration will be the [H+] of the solution.

geodome: while in general you are right, what you have wrote can be misleading. [H+] observed in the solution - the one that can be measured with pH checking - is something different from the amount of H+ ions tritrable. Nitrous acid acid is a weak one with pKa = 3.37.

Hotoke-sama: geodome is right, but your calculations for the amount of H+ ions tittrated with NaOH will be different from the one obtained from pH. That's proper result! In the solution with pH = 2.33 not all HNO2 is dissociated and it will dissociate during titration, so there will be more H+ ions to neutralize than 4.68x10^-3 * 0.01.
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Offline AWK

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Re:Acid Concentrations frustration
« Reply #3 on: April 05, 2005, 04:39:11 AM »
Quote
since each acid molecule (HNO2 and HNO3) contributes a H+ to the solution, hence the total acid concentration will be the [H+] of the solution.
It is not true. HNO2 is a weak acid and H+ concentration comes from HNO3 only. But during titration both HNO2 and HNO3 are titrated. Hence total concentration of acids can be calculated directly from result of titration
10.0 x c_acids = 10.3 x 0.030
« Last Edit: April 05, 2005, 05:04:06 AM by AWK »
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