Here it is:
Calcium ion triggers blood clotting, so when blood is donated, the receiving bag contains sodium oxalate solution to precipitate the Ca2+ and prevent clotting. A 104 mL sample of blood conatins 9.7x10^-5 g Ca2+/mL. A technologist treats the sample with 100.0 mL of 0.1550 M Na2C204. Calculate [Ca2+] after the treatment. Ksp of CaC204*H20 = 2.3x10^-9.
First I found the new molarities of Ca2+ and C204-2 to be 0.0012 M and 0.076 M, respectively.
Now the part I don't understand. Somebody told me that because in the reaction Ca2+ and C204-2 are in 1:1 mole ratios that you subtract the concentration of Ca2+ from C204-2 to find the C204-2 left over. Then you put that new concentration in the Ksp equation to find the new concentration of Ca2+.
I believe the answer is 3.1x10^-8 M. Is this correct?