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dchait

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Hi Guys,

How do i do this:

A 0.13mol L-1 NaOH solution was required for a titration

1. Calculate OH- concentration of solution
2. Calculate H+ concentration of solution
3. Calculate pH of solution
 

Jumbo Cactuar

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Hi dchait,

NaOH completely dissociates in water.

So [OH-] = [NaOH]
[OH-] = 0.13 M

The equation for the ionic product of water is;

[H+][OH-] = Kw = 1.008*10^-14 @ 25C
[H+] = 0.77 fM (that's femtomolar!)

pH = - log [H+]
pH = -log 0.7753846...*10^-15
pH = 13.1
 

Dreamerish*~

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dchait said:
Hi Guys,

How do i do this:

A 0.13mol L-1 NaOH solution was required for a titration

1. Calculate OH- concentration of solution
2. Calculate H+ concentration of solution
3. Calculate pH of solution
1. The reaction of NaOH in water is:

NaOH(aq) → Na+(aq) + OH-(aq)

NaOH is a strong base, which means the reaction goes to completion.

0.13 mol L-1 solution was used, therefore 0.13 mol of NaOH dissociates to 0.13 mol of Na+ and also 0.13 mol of OH-.

Hence the concentration of OH- in solution is 0.13 mol L-1

[OH-1] = 0.13 mol L-1

2. At standard room temperature, Kw = [H+] × [OH-1] = 1 × 10-14

[H+] × 0.13 = 1 × 10-14

Hence [H+[/sub]] = 7.69 × 10-14 mol L-1

3. pH = -log10[H+]

pH = -log10(7.69 × 10-14)

pH ≈ 13
 

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