Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Polyprotic Acid Example Chemistry Problem
Polyprotic Acid Example Chemistry Problem          A polyprotic acid is an acid that can donate more than one hydrogen atom (proton) in an aqueous solution. To find the pH of this type of acid, its necessary to know the dissociation constants for each hydrogen atom. This is an example of how to work a polyprotic acid chemistry problem.          Polyprotic Acid Chemistry Problem      Determine the pH of a 0.10 M solution of H2SO4.         Given: Ka2  1.3 x 10-2          Solution      H2SO4 has two H (protons), so it is a diprotic acid that undergoes two sequential ionizations in water:         First ionization: H2SO4(aq) ââ â H(aq)  HSO4-(aq)         Second ionization: HSO4-(aq) ââ¡â H(aq)  SO42-(aq)         Note that sulfuric acid is a strong acid, so its first dissociation approaches 100%. This is why the reaction is written using ââ â rather than ââ¡â. The HSO4-(aq) in the second ionization is a weak acid, so the H is in equilibrium with its conjugate base.         Ka2  [H][SO42-]/[HSO4-]         Ka2  1.3 x 10-2         Ka2  (0.10  x)(x)/(0.10 - x)         Since Ka2 is relatively large, its necessary to use the quadratic formula to solve for x:         x2  0.11x - 0.0013  0         x  1.1 x 10-2 M         The sum of the first and second ionizations gives the total [H] at equilibrium.         0.10  0.011  0.11 M         pH  -log[H]  0.96          Learn More      Introduction to Polyprotic Acids         Strength of Acids and Bases         Concentration of Chemical Species                         First Ionization  H2SO4(aq)  H+(aq)  HSO4-(aq)      Initial  0.10 M  0.00 M  0.00 M      Change  -0.10 M  +0.10 M  +0.10 M      Final  0.00 M  0.10 M  0.10 M      Second Ionization  HSO42-(aq)  H+(aq)  SO42-(aq)      Initial  0.10 M  0.10 M  0.00 M      Change  -x M  +x M  +x M      At Equilibrium  (0.10 - x) M  (0.10 + x) M  x M    
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