Hi, I've read in other posts that Ka of water is 1.8x10^-16 mol dm^-3. The explanation given was:
H2O -> H+ + OH-
Ka = [H+][OH-]/[H2O]
Since [H2O] is a constant of 55 mol dm^-3, and [H+][OH-] is equivalent to Kw, which is 10^-14, then Ka = 1.8x10^-16 mol dm^-3 at 25 degrees celcius.
But I thought the equation should really be H2O + H2O -> H3O+ + OH-, so shouldn't Ka = [H+][OH-]/[H2O]^2? So shouldn't Ka be 3.31 x 10^-18? Also, why is the concentration of water even included? I thought it's usually excluded since it's a constant? In which case, shouldn't Ka of water = Kw = [H=][OH-] = 10^-14?