Hi There,
I was given this question on an exam (i don't know if I got it right or wrong yet) and am hoping someone can help me understand this
I was given 4 options - asked which was NOT a buffer.
1)100 mL of 0.1 M Na2CO3 and 50 mL of 0.1 M HCl
2)100 mL of 0.1 M NaHCO3 and 25 mL of 0.2 M HCl
3)100 mL of 0.1 M Na2CO3 and 75 mL of 0.2 M HCl
4)100 mL of 0.2 M Na2CO3 and 100 mL of 0.4 M HCl
I wrote out the reaction and made ice tables for all of them
I was able to eliminate the first 2 options because it left .005 moles of Na2CO3 and HCO3 - weak base/conj acid.
For the first one:
Na2CO3 + HCl <--> HCO3 + NaCl
.01 .005 0 0
-.005 -.005 +.005 +.005
--------------------------------------
.005 .005
equal amouts of a weak base and its conjugate acid = Buffer
The second one is the same
Na2CO3 + HCl <--> HCO3 + NaCl
.01 .005 0 0
-.005 -.005 +.005 +.005
--------------------------------------
.005 .005
= Buffer
the third one and last one confused me...
Na2CO3 + HCl <--> HCO3 + NaCl
.01 .015 0 0
-.01 -.01 +.01 +.01
--------------------------------------…
0 .005 .01 .01
not a buffer b/c no Na2CO3 left, and HCl is a strong acid
the last I had as
Na2CO3 + HCl <--> HCO3 + NaCl
.02 .04 0 0
-.02 -.02 +.02 +.02
--------------------------------------…
0 .02 .02 .02
also not a buffer???
I'm confused about the 3rd and 4th option... both seem to leave no Na2CO3, and only HCl which couldn't make a buffer because it's a strong acid. The exam had specifically stated there was ONLY 1 CORRECT ANSWER.
I then thought that maybe we have to do a second dissociation for the HCO3 - but still not sure how to tell which one is not the buffer.
Can someone please help me with this and explain? I thought I was understanding these types of problems until I came across this one... I chose the 3rd option on the exam...
Any help and explanation would be appreciated!!!