I meant the pH of the 1L solution that contains 0,1M of the species that has pK=8,3. It's said exactly like that in the wording of the problem, "one liter of a 0,1M buffer (pKa = 8,3)".
What pH would you find for this solution? Understanding this could solve a lot of my confusion. Because I find different solutions (with my intuition telling me that the correct answer is pH 10,65).
You can't tell anything about the buffer pH without further information. All you know is that [HA]+[A
-]=0.1 M and what is the pKa value, but it is not enough information to tell what is the solution pH. All you know is that the pH was adjusted later to 2.0.
I also did the question c).
I found pH = 2,26 and at this pH, 9,12.10-5 % of HA is dissociated.
I have the intuition that the OH- first reacts with H+ to produce H2O, but I don't really understand why.
Order doesn't matter. H+ is definitely the stronger acid of the two present, so it is easier to think in terms of it reacting first. But even if, it is immediately followed by the HA dissociation and we are back to the H+ present (just in smaller amounts).
Technically it is equivalent to question whether neutralization of a weak acid is a one step reaction:
HA + OH- A- + H2O
or two step reaction:
HA H+ + OH-
H+ + OH- H2O
I don't know the answer, and the exact mechanism doesn't matter for the final equilibrium.
I think I got it. The H+ from the strong acid reacts with OH- to form water, and the HA dissociation happens simultaneously. When all the H+ has reacted though, at pH 2,26, the HA dissociation is very small.
Note: once HA dissociated, H
+ produced from HA dissociation becomes part of the general H
+ pool in the solution. You can't tell "this H
+ comes from the strong acid, and this H
+ comes from the weak acid". Besides, at equilibrium both dissociation and protonation processes still occur, so even if you were able to mark H
+ somehow, you will see they exchange their positions all the time.
Did you mean
HA H+ + A-
H+ + OH- H2O
Yes, sorry about that, a careless mistake. Corrected.
Also, maybe this is a stupid question, but could this happen:
HA + H2O A- + H3O+
Or maybe it doesn't happen in our case because there is OH- in solution, and pKa H2O/OH- is superior to pKa H3O+/H2O, so OH- wins over the water?
This is a matter of convention, I use H
+ as a shortcut to H
3O
+.
Note that in reality what is present in the solution is neither H
+ nor H
3O
+, there is an ongoing equilibrium with several even larger cations present (of the (H
2O)
nH
+ form - so H
3O
+, H
5O
2+, H
7O
3+ and so on, think about them as solvated proton).