i know that for your example of HCl the answer is more complicated then just say pH=8 because you have to consider the dissociation of the water as well
Same with ethanol solution.
And they did. They calculated the pH of 1M EtOH from the pK
a of Ethanol. Remember the derivation of pK
a is:
HB + H
2O
H
3O
+ + B
-Rate = [H
3O
+][B
-] / [HB][H
2O]
[H
2O] is a constant and [H
3O
+] is equivalent to [H
+] we can go on to say:
Rate x [H
2O] = [H
+][B
-] / [HB]
Or if we let Rate x [H
2O] be a new constant K
a:
K
a = [H
+][B
-] / [HB]
pK
a = -log
10(K
a)
The reason your HCl question doesn't work is that the pH = -log
10[HCl] formula is an approximation that relies on the assumptions that HCl disassociates entirely into its constituent ions so [H
+]
HCl = [HCl] (which is more or less true at STP) and that at
high concentrations (ie: above ~ 1mM) the contribution of H
+ to the solution from the water compared to that of the HCl is negligible.
But either way:
[H
+]
HCl = 10
-8[H
+]
H2O = 10
-7[H
+]
Total = 1.1 x 10
-7pH = 6.96
At 1uM HCl pH = 6.996
At 100nM pH = 6.9996
Etc, etc...
To sum up: EtOH is slightly basic - which makes sense on another level as:
CH
3CH
2OH
2+ is going to be much easier formed than CH
3CH
2O
- due to the lone pairs on the Oxygen attacking the occasional H
+ ion it comes across.