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If the PKa value for H2CO3 is 6.4, what is the pH of a 10^-3 M solution of this acid?
UCdannyLA said:Well, I thought I had lost the explanations, but I found it.
the answer is 4.7.
PKa = 6.4, which means Ka = 4 x 10^-7
Since Ka is hte dissociation constant,
Ka = [x]* [x] / (.001 M)
4 x 10^-7 = x^2 / (.001 M)
[x] = 2 x 10^-5
pH = -log [x]
pH = -log [2 x 10^-5]
pH = 4.7
Please tell me that this kind of tedious question won't appear on the MCAT...! is there a short cut?
geckoUBC said:This might be a dumb question, but... if pKa is 6.4, would Ka not be 10^-6.4?
Where are you guys getting these other values for Ka?
UCdannyLA said:Please tell me that this kind of tedious question won't appear on the MCAT...! is there a short cut?
ntc1983 said:For weak reagents, you can use this equation:
- pH = 0.5 pKa - 0.5log[HA] for weak acids, and
pOH = 0.5pKb - 0.5log[A-] for weak bases.
that only works for weak acids and bases...do u mean anything that protonates only1x (ie : only 1 H dissassociates in this case)PRamos said:There is an easy way to get pH of a weak acid in the BR general chemistry book. That is what ntc1983 used.
It is an awesome short cut that makes questions like this easy.
pH = 1/2(6.4) - 1/2log[0.001] = 3.2 - 1/2(-3) = 3.2 + 3/2 = 3.2 + 1.5 = 4.7
That is SOOO much easier than the method you wrote.
This is a perfect example of why I love the BR materials more than the PR materials I used the first time. I remember struggling with that question the first time I studied. Acid and Base stuff is so easy the they taught us to do it.
omg thank you!exlawgrrl said:dieselpetrolgirl,
i think you did the exponent wrong. to get the square root of an exponent, you divide by two, so the square root of 1 x 10^-10 is 1 x 10^-5. basically, you're raising each side to the 1/2. i did that, too, initially, and got a similar answer to yours.