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Topic: Calculating molarity of the acid solution?  (Read 3242 times)

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Offline h20h

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Calculating molarity of the acid solution?
« on: April 14, 2007, 01:04:22 AM »
Q:  If 20mL of a 0.3M solution of NaOH is required to neutralize 30.0 mL of a sulfuric acid solution, what is the molarity of the acid solution?  H2SO4 + 2NaOH = Na2SO4 + 2H20

A)  This is what I did:  I took the 20 ml and converted to Liters= .02 Liters....then took that and converted to moles by multiplying .02 and .3/1 liter which came out to be .006 moles of NaOH.  Since the stoich is 1:2  you have to take the .006 moles of NaOH and divide by 2 giving you .003 moles of H2SO4..

I then took the 30mL converted to liters giving me .03 liters, and then took the .003 moles of H2SO4 and divided it by .03 liters and got a .1M acidic solution??

Help here, right wrong? 

Thanks

Offline kristo

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Re: Calculating molarity of the acid solution?
« Reply #1 on: April 14, 2007, 10:50:37 AM »
That looks good to me. Good explanation while you were working the problem.

Offline h20h

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Re: Calculating molarity of the acid solution?
« Reply #2 on: April 14, 2007, 12:11:26 PM »
Thanks for your *delete me*

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