Hey everyone,
I'm in my first semester of biochemistry. I have this problem that confuses me so much. I was wondering if someone could walk me through it instead of just giving me the answer.
The problem goes like this:
Calculate the pH of a solution made from dissolving 0.2 mols of glycine and 0.1 mol of NaOH in a liter of water. The answer is supposed to be pH = 9.6.
There is something at the bottom of the problem saying that I should consider the charge of glycine power and the titration curve before adding any acid or base.
From what I know, glycine powder has a charge of 0 (because it's a powder), and before adding any acid or base, glycine is a zwitterion, so it has a charge of 0.
Glycine has a pI at pH6; pKa1=pH @ pH=2.3 and pKa2=pH @ pH=9.7
What I started doing was making a reaction between NaOH and glycine:
H3N+-CH2-COO- + OH- --> H2N-CH2-COO- + H2O
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oh crap. I think I just solved my own problem. So the 0.1mol of NaOH would react with 0.1 mols of glycine to produce H2N-CH2-COO-, which has a -1 charge. Since half of all glycine has a 0 charge and the other half has a -1 charge, there is a -1/2 charge overall and the pH of the solution is equal to pKa2, which is 9.7. Can anyone confirm this?
Is there another way to do this?
EDIT: SORRY! pK2 is equal to pH at 9.7, not 6.7