HCl & Carbonate

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

ThinkDoc

New Member
10+ Year Member
Joined
Dec 9, 2009
Messages
6
Reaction score
1
Points
4,531
  1. Pre-Medical
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad
If you have solution with (SO4)^2- and CO32- and add HCl, how come you get CO2 and not SO3 gas?
 
First off HCl is a strong acid that will completely dissociate into H+ and Cl-.
Now which of the 2 anions will get the H+s?
Clearly H2C03 is a much weaker acid than the strong H2SO4. (SO4)^-2 is quite OK with being an anion being a conjugate base of a strong acid.
(CO3)^-2 is a strong base though. It wants those H+ bad. Now that we gave it some by dissolving some HCl, it will form H2CO3. That acid though tends to break into H20 and C02 though. Hence the C02 gas.
 
Top Bottom