Net Ionic

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Baylor2011

DDS Apprentice
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Can somebody explain this one to me?

Net ionic equation for:

HCl (aq) + NaOH (aq) -> H2O (l) + NaCl (aq)

Answer is: H3O+ (aq) + OH (aq) -> 2H2O (l)

What I'm confused with is where did the H3O come from, and how did H2O get from one equivalent to two?

Thanks
 
H+ never exists as it is shown, in (aq) phase H3O+ exists. Just a format problem dont worry
 
So when they give the net ionic equation of: BaCO3 (s) + HCl (aq) as:

BaCO3 (s) + 2H+ (aq) -> H2O (l) + CO2 (g) + Ba2+ (aq)

Confused now!! 😕
 
Hmm, this is interesting but my take is that HCl and NaOH are strong acid/base respectively so they dissociate completely to H3O+ and OH-. Then you balance H3O+ and OH- and you get 2H2O because you have 4 Hs and 2 Os as reactants. The NaCl, I wouldn't think has any ionic role in this. Anyone else have any ideas?
 
HCl and NaOH are strong acids and bases. so that means that their pH when mixed in equal moles will be at about 7 (complete dissociation). so their net ionic is the same as that of water, which is H3O+ + OH- --> 2H2O. NaCl is actually a spectator since its a salt and can be ignored for the net ionic equation.
 
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