- Joined
- Jun 10, 2008
- Messages
- 56
- Reaction score
- 0
Sodium carbonate is the preferred primary standard for acidic solutions. What is the mass of sodium carbonate required to neutralize 25.10 mL of 0.07520 N HCl(aq)? (The molecular weight of sodium carbonate is 106.0 amu.)
In order to neutralize HCl, the moles of carbonate would need to equal the moles of H+. Therefore, if you convert the 25.10 mL to L and multiply by the normality (basically equal to molarity since for HCl, the stuff of interest is only 1 H+). This gives you the number of moles of HCl. If you then do a stoichiometric ratio of HCl to Na2CO3 (which I think is 1 to 1, since there is only 1 CO3 per Na2CO3) and then multiply by the molecular weight of sodium carbonate, you should the the necessary grams that the question is asking for.
When I did this, I obtained 200.0 mg, but the answer is actually 100.0 mg. I assumed that my mistake was that in the stoichiometric ratio of how many moles of sodium carbonate it takes to neutralize 1 mole of HCl, that it should actually be 2 to 1 instead of 1 to 1. However, if I plug that in, I get 400.0 mg, not 100.0 mg.
Is Kaplan just incorrect, or did I set this up wrong - any ideas?
In order to neutralize HCl, the moles of carbonate would need to equal the moles of H+. Therefore, if you convert the 25.10 mL to L and multiply by the normality (basically equal to molarity since for HCl, the stuff of interest is only 1 H+). This gives you the number of moles of HCl. If you then do a stoichiometric ratio of HCl to Na2CO3 (which I think is 1 to 1, since there is only 1 CO3 per Na2CO3) and then multiply by the molecular weight of sodium carbonate, you should the the necessary grams that the question is asking for.
When I did this, I obtained 200.0 mg, but the answer is actually 100.0 mg. I assumed that my mistake was that in the stoichiometric ratio of how many moles of sodium carbonate it takes to neutralize 1 mole of HCl, that it should actually be 2 to 1 instead of 1 to 1. However, if I plug that in, I get 400.0 mg, not 100.0 mg.
Is Kaplan just incorrect, or did I set this up wrong - any ideas?