yes if you make the pH to 12,4 you're right, but if you drop H3PO4 or H3PO3 in water you hardly find any PO4(3-) or PO3(3-) in your solution, because the third dissociation won't take place !
Please read thread subject - it is not about concentrations, but about number of protons that
CAN dissociate. Besides, stating that 3
rd dissociation step won't take place is simply erroneous - it will take place and it will be described by the dissociation constant you have already posted.
by the way: i have abolished HH-equation in my life --> i prefer the normal equilibrium expression.
And? I am using whichever makes expanation or solving of the question easiest. Sometimes it is overal dissociation equation, sometimes stepwise equation, sometimes protonation equation - and sometimes HH. Does it change the result?
OP question is ambiguous - there are two isomers of H
3PO
3 - one has two protons that can dissociate, one has three.