1.A mixture of HCl and SO2 gases occupies 4.36L at 0.983atm and 294K. The mixture is bubbled into pure water and dissolves compeltely to form a mixture of hydrochloric acid and dibasic acid H2SO3. The aqueous solution is titrated with 6.00M NaOH and a volume of 42.3mL is required to teach an endpoint. Find the number of moles of each gas in the original mixture.
For this question, the only information I found is that there were initially 0.178 mol of gases (HCl + SO2) and 0.254 mol of NaOH is required to neturalize the aqueous solution. I can't relate the amount of NaOH back to moles of HCL and SO2.
2.
A 5.0 L flask contains a mixture of ammonia gas (NH3) and diatomic nitrogen at 27°C and a total pressure of 3.00 atm. Gas is allowed to escape from the flask until the pressure inside falls to 1.00 atm, and the gas that escaped is passed through 1.50 L of 0.200 M acetic acid (CH3COOH). The ammonia from the gas mixture is entirely absorbed by the acid, and turns out to be just the right amount to neutralize the acid.
a) Write a balanced chemical equation for the reaction that occurs.
b) Assume that the liquid volume of 1.50 L remains constant during this process. Calculate the final concentrations of all species that are present in the aqueous solution in more than trace amounts. [NH4+] = [OAc-] = 0.200 M
c) Calculate the percentage by mass of ammonia in the original gas mixture.
The answers I got so for is
a. NH3 + HOAc → NH4+ + OAc-
b. [NH4+] = [OAc-] = 0.200 M
c. Not sure. I know that 0.300 mol of NH3 is bubbled through acid but can't find out how much NH3 was initially in the flask.