Calculating H3O+ Concentration Using Buffer Solution

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Homework Statement



What is the H3O+ concentration with the following scenario

5.3e-2M HCl and 7.70e-2 M NaC2H3O2

Homework Equations



Kw = Kb(Ka) ICE tables

The Attempt at a Solution



Both solutions 100% dissociation

The HCl should be fully neutralized giving 7.70e-2 - 5.3e-2 = 0.024M of the acetate left. Knowing the Kb of acetic acid is 5.56e-10 I set up an ICE table (5.56e-10*0.024)1/2 to find [OH-] to be 0.0000037. Convert that to what H+ concentration by taking 1e-14/0.0000037 = 3e-9. This answer is wrong. Could somebody point out where I went wrong.
 
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The problem is I used the HH equation in my last question and failed. Should I just use the HH equation with the acetic ion concentration being the concentration of HCl and the acetate ion concentration is just the original concentration subtract HCl concentration?
 
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That's the correct approach here.

What was the previous question? I guess there was a reason why HH was not applicable.

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Thanks for your help just solved this question.

The previous question was 0.1 M NaNO2 and 0.05 HNO2. The Ka was 4e-4. I kept on getting 3.70 to be the pH which meant [H+] was 0.0002 but the answer was 3.6e-4.

EDIT. Masteringchemistry wanted we to assume their Ka value in their textbook which was twice as big of a value everywhere else on the internet grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.
 
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