SA + SB always give pH= 7 even if concentration of SA is a lot bigger than SB?

AI Thread Summary
In titration involving strong acids and bases, the pH at the equivalence point is always 7 at 25°C, regardless of the concentrations of the acid and base. For example, when titrating 10 M HCl with 0.1 mM NaOH, the key factor is the number of moles of acid and base, not their molarity. Even with a highly concentrated acid, the equivalence point will still yield a neutral pH because the moles of H+ from the acid will equal the moles of OH- from the base. At this point, the solution primarily consists of water and NaCl, resulting from the neutralization reaction. To understand the process better, one can calculate the volume of 0.1 mM NaOH needed to reach the equivalence point with a given volume of 10 M HCl, reinforcing the concept that the final solution behaves like a salt solution in water.
cmkc109
Messages
103
Reaction score
0
SA + SB always give pH= 7 even if concentration of SA is a lot bigger than SB? let's say 10 M of HCl react with 0.1 M of NaOH, is the pH at equivalence point also 7?
 
Chemistry news on Phys.org
When titrating strong acids/bases (assumed fully ionized) you can just think about the moles instead of the molarity. This is where, it seems, you are being confused. You can titrate a 10M strong acid solution with 0.1mM strong base, you'll just need a lot of the base (because it is much more dilute you'll need to add a lot of the basic solution to match the moles of acid). The equivalence point however, will be at pH 7 at 25 C, because at that point the acid and base number of moles are equal and its as though you dropped in the salt of the counter ions into water.

It may be useful for you to calculate, for instance, how much of a 0.1mM NaOH solution is needed to titrate 25mL of a 10M HCl solution to the equivalence point. Then think about what you will have at the end. If the [H+] = [OH-], then you have pretty much water (and the scant amount of acid/base from auto ionization) and NaCl. It's as though you just made an NaCl solution in pure water.
 
Thanks Yanick for clearing my doubt, very helpful :)
 
I want to test a humidity sensor with one or more saturated salt solutions. The table salt that I have on hand contains one of two anticaking agents, calcium silicate or sodium aluminosilicate. Will the presence of either of these additives (or iodine for that matter) significantly affect the equilibrium humidity? I searched and all the how-to-do-it guides did not address this question. One research paper I found reported that at 1.5% w/w calcium silicate increased the deliquescent point by...
Back
Top