Gchem question

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GRAD

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please explain:

The ksp of AgI in an aqueous soln is 1*10-6 mol/L. If a 1*10-5 soln of AgNO3 is saturated with AgI, what will be the final concentration of the iodide ion??

kinda confused..can someone work it out step ny step? thanks!
 
since the Ksp of AgI is 1*10^-6, but you already have 1*10^-5 molar solution of AgNO3. This is now a simple common ion effect problem, with ksp=1*10^-6=[Ag], and you know there's already 1*10^-5 of Ag in solution. the answer is thus 1*10^-1 moles per liter

 
please explain:

The ksp of AgI in an aqueous soln is 1*10-6 mol/L. If a 1*10-5 soln of AgNO3 is saturated with AgI, what will be the final concentration of the iodide ion??

kinda confused..can someone work it out step ny step? thanks!

Ksp = 1 * 10^-6 = [Ag+][I-] = [Ag]^2 = [I-]^2

[Ag+] = [I-] = 10^-3 M This is the maximum amount that can dissolve

assuming the final volume doesn't change much:

[I-] = 10^-3 (max. Ag) - 10^-5 (Ag in soln prior to adding AgI) = 9.9 * 10^-4 = AgI or Ag or I that was added

Can someone please check my math & calculations?
 
since the Ksp of AgI is 1*10^-6, but you already have 1*10^-5 molar solution of AgNO3. This is now a simple common ion effect problem, with ksp=1*10^-6=[Ag], and you know there's already 1*10^-5 of Ag in solution. the answer is thus 1*10^-1 moles per liter



I don't think [I-] = 10^-1. @10^-3 the solution is saturated. [I-] in the solution can't be greater than 10^-3
 
I don't think [I-] = 10^-1. @10^-3 the solution is saturated. [I-] in the solution can't be greater than 10^-3
Yes, it is. Here is how you do it..

--------------AgI --> Ag+ ------+ I-
Original---------------10^-5 (AgNO3 is completely ionized)
From AgI -------------x-----------x
Equilibrium: ----------(x+10^-5)---x

Ksp = (x+10^-5)x = 10^-6

10^-5 >> x. Thus, (x+10^-5) = 10^-5
Thus x = 10^-1
 
Yes, it is. Here is how you do it..

--------------AgI --> Ag+ ------+ I-
Original---------------10^-5 (AgNO3 is completely ionized)
From AgI -------------x-----------x
Equilibrium: ----------(x+10^-5)---x

Ksp = (x+10^-5)x = 10^-6

10^-5 >> x. Thus, (x+10^-5) = 10^-5
Thus x = 10^-1

Ksp = 10^-6
Ksp = [Ag+][I-] = x * x = x^2 = 10^-6
[Ag+] = [I-] = [x] = 10^-3 This is the maximum amnt of [I-] you can have in the solution

How can you have 10^-1 which is equal to 100 times the max amnt you can have in a saturated solution???!!!
 
Ksp = 10^-6
Ksp = [Ag+][I-] = x * x = x^2 = 10^-6
[Ag+] = [I-] = [x] = 10^-3 This is the maximum amnt of [I-] you can have in the solution

How can you have 10^-1 which is equal to 100 times the max amnt you can have in a saturated solution???!!!
OK, I'm pretty sure what I posted was how it's done for this type of question. But I just realized that my assumption (10^-5 >>x) is not met in this case. So, I guess, we'll have to solve the equation to get the exact answer.
x^2 + 10^-5x - 10^-6 = 0
x comes out to be 10^-3 - (10^-5)/2 which can be rounded up to your 10^-3. However, I don't think you can ignore the 10^-5 (which should be chosen differently). It must be included. Check your g chem book.
 
You already have your Ag in solution. it is not x as you are stating. the ksp of AgI is 1*10^-6, but you already have 1*10^-5 moles of Ag. All you can add is 10^-1 mol of Ag, which means that 10^-1 mole of I must accompany it.

I don't think [I-] = 10^-1. @10^-3 the solution is saturated. [I-] in the solution can't be greater than 10^-3
 
OK, I'm pretty sure what I posted was how it's done for this type of question. But I just realized that my assumption (10^-5 >>x) is not met in this case. So, I guess, we'll have to solve the equation to get the exact answer.
x^2 + 10^-5x - 10^-6 = 0
x comes out to be 10^-3 - (10^-5)/2 which can be rounded up to your 10^-3. However, I don't think you can ignore the 10^-5 (which should be chosen differently). It must be included. Check your g chem book.

I didn't ignore 10^-5. This was my original solution:

Ksp = 1 * 10^-6 = [Ag+][I-] = [Ag]^2 = [I-]^2

[Ag+] = [I-] = 10^-3 M This is the maximum amount that can dissolve

assuming the final volume doesn't change much:

[I-] = 10^-3 (max. Ag) - 10^-5 (Ag in soln prior to adding AgI) = 9.9 * 10^-4 = AgI or Ag or I that was added

Can someone please check my math & calculations?

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You already have your Ag in solution. it is not x as you are stating. the ksp of AgI is 1*10^-6, but you already have 1*10^-5 moles of Ag. All you can add is 10^-1 mol of Ag, which means that 10^-1 mole of I must accompany it.

10^-1 = 10000 * 10^-5 = 100 * 10^-3

P.S. I'll be back home later tonight. I'll be sure to check this thread.
 
people seem to be confused whether there should be first a limit to the saturated iodine ion concentration as a ceiling concentration for I-.

just set it up like your supposed to:
AgI --> Ag+ + I-
na 1e-5 0
na x x

equation: 1e-6 = x(1e-5+x)

For the added AgI to participate in the reaction, you have to see that for every I- that dissociates, there will be another Ag+ and you're already near the ceiling for Ag+. Because x and the original concentration are close, the only way to solve is via quadratic equation. which probably won't ever come up on the DAT.

good practice though. Answer is 1e-3 for I- at point of saturation.
 
Im pretty sure the answer is 1*10^-1. I just did this problem the long, protracted way, and assuming x is small, you get 10^-1. however, in this case x is not small, so you'd have to go into foiling to figure this out. I checked Kaplan and they have a similar question, but where the Ksp of AgI is 1*10^-16, which when worked out makes x small.
 
people seem to be confused whether there should be first a limit to the saturated iodine ion concentration as a ceiling concentration for I-.

just set it up like your supposed to:
AgI --> Ag+ + I-
na 1e-5 0
na x x

equation: 1e-6 = x(1e-5+x)

For the added AgI to participate in the reaction, you have to see that for every I- that dissociates, there will be another Ag+ and you're already near the ceiling for Ag+. Because x and the original concentration are close, the only way to solve is via quadratic equation. which probably won't ever come up on the DAT.

good practice though. Answer is 1e-3 for I- at point of saturation.

Yep, that's how I approached too.
 
Where did this question come from? This exact problem is on page 286 in the Kaplan Blue book but the Ksp is given to be 1 x 10^-16 mol/L.

I think the way this particular from the OP is presented is not representative of how one would see it on the dat. If the solution already contained 1 x 10^-5 mol Ag+, it is already supersaturated and I don't believe any appreciable amount of I- will dissociate.

But 1 x 10^-1 is WAY too much I- to dissociate b/c your Ksp would then be

Ksp = ((1 x 10^-5) + (1 x 10^-1)*(1 x 10^-1) = 1 x 10^-2


BTW, EVEN 1 x 10^-3 is TOO HIGH...
 
people seem to be confused whether there should be first a limit to the saturated iodine ion concentration as a ceiling concentration for I-.

just set it up like your supposed to:
AgI --> Ag+ + I-
na 1e-5 0
na x x

equation: 1e-6 = x(1e-5+x)

For the added AgI to participate in the reaction, you have to see that for every I- that dissociates, there will be another Ag+ and you're already near the ceiling for Ag+. Because x and the original concentration are close, the only way to solve is via quadratic equation. which probably won't ever come up on the DAT.

good practice though. Answer is 1e-3 for I- at point of saturation.

Can't solve via quadratic b/c the value of b2 - 4ac is a negative number.
 
people seem to be confused whether there should be first a limit to the saturated iodine ion concentration as a ceiling concentration for I-.

just set it up like your supposed to:
AgI --> Ag+ + I-
na 1e-5 0
na x x

equation: 1e-6 = x(1e-5+x)

For the added AgI to participate in the reaction, you have to see that for every I- that dissociates, there will be another Ag+ and you're already near the ceiling for Ag+. Because x and the original concentration are close, the only way to solve is via quadratic equation. which probably won't ever come up on the DAT.

good practice though. Answer is 1e-3 for I- at point of saturation.

very close to 1e-3 because Ag+ reaches the saturation point (i.e. 10^-3 or 1e-3) before I- does. See my calculations above.

..

If the solution already contained 1 x 10^-5 mol Ag+, it is already supersaturated


No because 10^-5 < 10^-3 (the saturation point)

BTW, EVEN 1 x 10^-3 is TOO HIGH

it's pretty close to 10^-3 (the saturation point). [See my calculations above]
 
dat_student,
Read page 922 in the white kaplan. There's one example just like this question where they implicitly made the same assumption as I did. Fortunately, it came out to match their assumption. It's OK to be wrong. 😉
 
dat_student,
Read page 922 in the white kaplan. There's one example just like this question where they implicitly made the same assumption as I did. Fortunately, it came out to match their assumption. It's OK to be wrong. 😉

My room is a mess and I can't find the white book (moving to LA). I agree with you 100%. It's ok to be wrong. I just don't see how you can have 10^-1 when saturation is reached at a much lower concentration (i.e. 10^-3). If you think that makes sense fine I am wrong. I am not going to post anything else regarding the question. I give up.
 
My room is a mess and I can't find the white book (moving to LA). I agree with you 100%. It's ok to be wrong. I just don't see how you can have 10^-1 when saturation is reached at a much lower concentration (i.e. 10^-3). If you think that makes sense fine I am wrong. I am not going to post anything else regarding the question. I give up.

Think about it....if the AgNO3 sol'n already contains 1x10-5 M Ag+,his is 10 times the value of the Ksp... it is supersaturated wrt Ag+ and therefore AgI will dissociate to a negligible degree.

B/c if I- dissociates to 10-3 then so does Ag+. There is NO WAY Ag+ would dissociate to that degree in a solution where the concentration is already above the Ksp.
 
Personally i think its 1*10-1...

we start with [Ag+] = 10^-5, [I-] = 0

solution is saturated with AgI (i.e. w/ Ag+ & I-, 1 mole of AgI = 1 mole of (Ag+) + 1 mole of (I-))

[I-] = 10^-1 means we added AgI = 10^-1 OR Ag+=10^-1 & I-= 10^-1 because we started with [I-] = 0

ksp = 10^-6 = [Ag+][I-]

but 10^-6 < (10^-1 + 10^-5)(10^-1)
10^-6 < approx. 10^-2

10^-2 is much larger than 10^-6. This means if we add 10^-1 we go beyond the saturation point
 
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