G chem.

Started by Danny289
This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

Danny289

Member
10+ Year Member
15+ Year Member
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad
If the pH of a 0.10 M weak solution is 2.70, what is the concentration of the conjugate base?

A. 0.10 M
B. 2.0 x 10^-2 M
C. 2.0 x 10^-3 M
D. 2.0 x 10^-4 M

what you think? and why
 
hmm i think how you do this is you take the pH= 2.7 = about 2 x10^-3 (H+ concentration aka Ka) and then subtract that from .1M and you should get something x10^-2 so i would go with B
 
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad
assuming this is a weak monoprotic acid, the concentration of H+ in the solution is going to be equal to the concentration of the conjugate base. Therefore, it should be 10^-2.7 which is close to 2 * 10^-3.
I would pick C.
 
Last edited:
assuming this is a weak monoprotic acid, the concentration of H+ in the solution is going to be equal to the concentration of the conjugate base. Therefore, it should be 10^-2.7 which is close to 2 * 10^-3.
I would pick B.

you mean C harry, 2x10^-3 is answer choice C...

I actually agree with you, because the dissociation assuming its a monoprotic acid like you said will make up H+ and the conjugate base, therefore the H+ concentration should equal the conjugate base concentration...
 
B sounds reasonable to me! for the exact same reason Osims said!

HCl -> H+ + Cl-

So if [H+] is around 2 x 10^-3, then [Cl-] = .1M - (2x10^-3)
 
you mean C harry, 2x10^-3 is answer choice C...

I actually agree with you, because the dissociation assuming its a monoprotic acid like you said will make up H+ and the conjugate base, therefore the H+ concentration should equal the conjugate base concentration...

Yeah, I meant choice C. Sorry about that. It was just a typo. Danny, you mean the answer is not C?
 
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad
assuming this is a weak monoprotic acid, the concentration of H+ in the solution is going to be equal to the concentration of the conjugate base. Therefore, it should be 10^-2.7 which is close to 2 * 10^-3.
I would pick C.
you are rightttttttttttttttttttt> king of chem beautiful resoning
 
you mean C harry, 2x10^-3 is answer choice C...

I actually agree with you, because the dissociation assuming its a monoprotic acid like you said will make up H+ and the conjugate base, therefore the H+ concentration should equal the conjugate base concentration...

if the PH of the weak acid is 2.7, then the [H+] = 2 x 10^-3M , but I dont understand why that would equal the conjugate base?
 
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad
So basically its like this:

HAC ----> AC- + H+

pH= [H+] = 2x10^-3 which would also be the same concentration for AC-
 
but if it was a diprotic acid it would still be like this correct:

H2AC ----> HAC- + H+

it would still be the same concentration tho for H+ and HAC-
 
but if it was a diprotic acid it would still be like this correct:

H2AC ----> HAC- + H+

it would still be the same concentration tho for H+ and HAC-

Yeah, but if you consider this H2AC ---> 2H+ + AC - then it would not. Anyway, that question should have been more specific.
 
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad
Harry,would tell me so when do we use Henderson-Hasselbach Equation.I'm very confuse about this subject?

We could have used Henderson-... if we had the pka of the acid.

PH - pka = log A-/HA

This is really simple. if 1 mole of 10 moles of HA dissociates, you will have 1 mole of H+ and 1 mol of A-. concentration of H+ and A- will be the same.