But I was actually wondering.
(...) why would the production of the H+ reaction (Ka) is favoured?
a physicist once told me: a scientist should ask "how?" , i.e. try to explain interconnections, and not "why" , i.e. try to be philosophical about what we're finding. Ours is to describe nature and how it works, and not to give it a meaning instead.
what in last consequence you're doing is, to question nature
why acetic acid does have the properties it actually has (i.e. the ratio of success with either OH
- or H
+ production, if both the acid and it's salt were in the game)
now, you could step back some and try to explain the properties of acetic acid in aqueous solutions, maybe by applying some quantum mechanic calculations, too
but that's as far as we can reach in chemistry : to explain these properties by some underlying equations, which culminate in this specific K
a value for acetic acid (with other acids having other K
a values belonging to): i.e. calculate the value for K
a from more basic features instead of just measuring it.
beyond that, maybe physicists do have some deeper insights how it is that matter behaves like it does: somehow the properties of acetic acid should emerge from that level, I take it
beyond that, I do have no answers
regards
Ingo