Ok I will rewrite here rather than modifying the original post, since that is more by the forum spirit:
At a certain, known initial/analytical concentration of diprotic acid H2A, I have measured [H+]. I know that the first dissociation of H2A is always strong (goes to completion) and the second is weak.
Can I use this data-point (analytical concentration, c0(H2A), of the acid, and the [H+] it produces) to correctly calculate Ka2, given that Ka1 is (known to be) infinity?
My original method for doing so - tested against H2A=H2SO4, c0(H2SO4) = 1 · 10-7 M and [H+] = 2.41 · 10-7 M - gives a Ka2 of 9.6456 · 10-4.
I know this to be wrong because Ka2 = 1.1*10-2 for H2SO4 and this reading of [H+] (that [H+] = 2.41 · 10-7 M when c0(H2A) = 1 · 10-7 M, if Ka2 = 1.1*10-2) was actually given as a calculated value in a problem I found.
My full method can be found below. Since the steps are the same for all such problems I have omitted rearrangements etc.
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From Ka2 = [A2-][H+] / [HA-] and c0(H2A) = [HA-] + [A2-], we substitute to find:
[A2-] = c0(H2A) * Ka2 / ([H+] + Ka2)
and
[HA-] = c0(H2A) * [H+] / ([H+] + Ka2)
Now we substitute from above into the charge balance [H+] = [HA-] + 2[A2-] + [OH-], along with [OH-]=Kw/[H+]. This leaves us with a cubic equation in [H+]. I rearranged this for Ka2 to get:
[tex]K_{a2} = \frac{H^3 - H^2c_0 - K_wH}{K_w+2c_0H-H^2}[/tex]
where H stands for [H+] and the rest should be obvious. I plugged in the values c0(H2SO4) = 1 · 10-7 M, [H+] = 2.41 · 10-7 M, Kw = 10-14 and got roughly 9.65 · 10-4 as the Ka2.
Why is it so different from the correct value? What procedure should I follow, to find Ka2, knowing [H+] for a given c0(H2A) as well as Kw, given that Ka1 = ∞.