so does water ALWAYS form 1.0 x 10^-7 H+ and 1.0 x 10^-7 OH at 25 celsius?
No. The autoprotolysis of water is an equilibrium, so if there's another "source" of H
+ ions, like the complete dissociation of a strong acid such as HCl, then by Le Chatelier's principle the equilibrium of water will be displaced towards the formation of water and the concentration of H
+ will be lower than 1x10
-7 M.
oh and when do we take into account the autoprotolysis of water? is it only when acid/base concentrations are small? and what is considered small? thank you
Depends on whether it's a strong acid/base or weak acid/base.
I went through my notes and it says that for a strong acid/base, as long as the concentration of acid or base is superior to 10
-5, then you can ignore the autoprotolysis of water, because water will contribute with even less than 10
-7 M of H
+ ions and the error you're making is small and negligible.
For weak acids and bases there are 3 possible approximations:
1) If the acid/base is weak (k
a x 1000 > C
HA) and the concentration relatively high (k
a x C
HA > 1000 x k
w), then you can ignore the autoprotolysis of water and so the concentration of H
3O
+ comes as the square root of the product k
a x C
HA. When I say you can ignore the ionization of the acid I mean that the concentration of HA at equilibrium is equal to the initial concentration of acid. The H
+ concentration would still come from the ionization of the acid, but it's just a way to simplify the equation that you'd get.
2) If the acid is not that weak (k
a x 1000 > or approximately C
HA) and the concentration relatively high (K
a x C
HA > 1000 x K
w), then you can't ignore the ionization of the acid but you can ignore the autoprotolysis of water.
3) If the acid/base is weak (k
a x 1000 > C
HA) but the concentration relatively low (k
a x C
HA < or approximately 1000 x k
w), then you can't ignore the autoprotolysis of water but you can ignore the ionization of the acid.