so would the equations look like this?
NaOH + OH- (arrow) H3O + NaO
KCH3Coo + H2O (arrow) H3O + KCH2COO
I think this is right if not could you please tell me what I am doing wrong
Thanks
I may be giving too much away here .
Maybe if you look at the reactions in the order of my questions it might help sort things out. (I'm writing the equations slightly unconventionally to emphasise ions)
Salt of weak acid - strongly dissociated. Look at ionic products.CH
3COO
-K
+ --> CH
3COO
- + K
+Weak acid - slightly dissociated (ignoring water to simplify)- an equilibrium state. Look at the reactant and the ionic products.CH
3COOH <-> CH
3COO
- + H
+ Understand the interaction of the products from both reactions and which products are in large concentration and which are small when weak acid mixed with solution of its potassium salt.This is the clincher
Note that CH
3COO
- is a product of
both reactions but the equilibrium is
different for both.
Final hint: the salt dissociation dominates
The standard argument goes (look up other examples in your test book):
Now .
1. What happens to the equilibrium of both reactions under the condition of a lot of CH
3COO
-? (Think Le Chatelier)
2. What happens when you add H
+? (Le Chat again)
3. What happens when you add OH
-? (Le Chat again !! )
I have seen arguments that use the equilibrium constant to explain shift in equilibrium position - and I don't understand them
Clive