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Topic: Correctness of concentration of S²⁻ in the two answers to the same question.  (Read 1549 times)

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Offline Win,odd Dhamnekar

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The-first ionization constant of H2S is 9.1 x 10-8. Calculate the concentration of HS- ions in its 0.1 M solution and how will this concentration be affected if the solution is 0.1 M in HCl also? If the second dissociation constant of H2S is 1.2 x 10-13, calculate the concentration of S2-under both conditions.


Solution:  Concentration of S2- under both the conditions, are different in these two answers. Which one is correct? In my opinion, concentration of S2- in answer 1 is correct.


« Last Edit: December 20, 2020, 01:43:02 AM by Win,odd Dhamnekar »
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Offline AWK

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Copies of solutions are not very legible.
You ignore significant figures. For concentrations 0.1 - 1 significant digit in the answer, for 0.10 - two significant digits.

The correct approximate solutions are as follows [HS-], [S2-] (for water and acid, respectively)
 - SQRT (0.1·K1), K2, K1 and K1K2/0.1, respectively).
The calculator is only useful to calculate the square root and the product of K1·K2.

What does the last line in Part Three mean.
AWK

Offline mjc123

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You are right that answer 1 is correct. The fallacy in answer 2 is the statement that [H+] = 2[S2-]. The correct mass balance is
[H+] = [HS-] + 2[S2-]
As the degree of the second ionisation is very small, we can use our answers for [HS-] and [H+] from the first part.

Offline Win,odd Dhamnekar

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Here is the neat, legible copy of first answer in which the concentration of [HS]- and S2- in the absence of HCl and in the presence of HCl is computed correctly. I also don't  understand last line of part three of second answer.
Any science consists of the following process.
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5) Think 6) Understand 7) Inference 8) take decision [Believe or disbelieve, useful or useless, healthy or unhealthy, cause or effect, favorable or unfavorable, practical or theoretical, practically possible or practically impossible, true or false or  any other required criteria]

Offline AWK

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This assumption does not take into account that the main amount of H+ comes from the 1st degree of dissociation of H2S
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Offline Win,odd Dhamnekar

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Neat and legible second answer to this question.
Solution:-
 Given: First ionization constant of H2S= 9.1×10-8.
 The  second dissociation constant of H2S is 1.2 × 10-13.
(i) To compute the concentration of HS- ion:
Case a: in the absense of HCl: concentration of H2S solution =0.1M

Any science consists of the following process.
 1) See 2) Hear 3) Smell if needed 4) Taste if needed
5) Think 6) Understand 7) Inference 8) take decision [Believe or disbelieve, useful or useless, healthy or unhealthy, cause or effect, favorable or unfavorable, practical or theoretical, practically possible or practically impossible, true or false or  any other required criteria]

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