Alright, I must thank everyone help's on this topic.
I have spoken to my lecturer and she accepted my explanation.
Here it is.
The equation is HA+H
2O⇌ H3O
+ + A
-.
By Le Chatelier's, it's actually the number of mols of hydronium ion increases, not necessarily the concentration increases. This is because when adding water, the volume increases and we are not sure if the number of mols increases faster or the volume, hence the concentration is undetermined by Le Chatelier.
Then, I use the acidity constant.
K
a=[H
+][A
-]/[HA]
As we know for sure the [HA] decreases from the equilibrium equation (number of mols decreases, volume increases), hence from the K
a, we know the [H+] also decreases.
So, we should see an increase in pH when water is added to weak acid.
Another supporting point is, when water is added into the strong acid, the acid gets diluted, and the H+ ions dissociate fully. For the weak acid, when water is added, it gets diluted as well, but it produces even lesser amount of H+, so surely it would get diluted like how the strong acid (for its being fully dissociated still get an increased pH), not to say the partially dissociated weak acid.
So, how was my explanation? Is there any mistake?
Anyway, I thank very much for your help and taking your time to read my thread.
Thanks!