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Topic: Hydroxonium and proton  (Read 1542 times)

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Offline Big-Daddy

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Hydroxonium and proton
« on: December 03, 2013, 05:33:24 PM »
Is it true that the reaction 2 H2::equil:: H3O+ + OH- has a different equilibrium constant to that of Kw, H2::equil:: H+ + OH- ? How can that be?

If we want a decent treatment of an acid-base system using [H3O+] rather than the less accurate [H+], what modifications do we have to make to the process used for the simple [H+] case?

Offline Mr Lead

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Re: Hydroxonium and proton
« Reply #1 on: December 08, 2013, 08:21:10 AM »
No,it's not true. The equilibrium constant value is the same, It's only a different symbology, both express the same chemical concept. Anyhow H3O+ is the better way, because in aqueous solution H+ can't "live" free, "isolated" but is always associated to the relative base H2O.

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