How Do You Calculate pH After Adding NaOH to H2S Solution?

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the pH after adding 800 mL of 0.1 M NaOH to a 500 mL solution of 0.1 M H2S, one must consider the weak acid's dissociation and the strong base's effect. The initial moles of H2S (0.05) and NaOH (0.08) lead to a reaction where NaOH neutralizes some of the H2S, resulting in a remaining concentration of HS- and S2-. The Henderson-Hasselbalch equation is suggested for calculating the pH, using the second dissociation constant (Ka2) of H2S. The calculated pH should reflect the equilibrium concentrations of the species present after the reaction.
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Homework Statement



A vessel contains 500mL of .1 molar H2S solution. For H2S Ka1 = 1 x 10^-7
Ka2 = 1.3 x 10^-13.

What will the pH be when 800mL of .1molar NaOH has been added.

Homework Equations



ph = -log([H])
ph = pka + log(B/A)

The Attempt at a Solution


This is how I started, I found the moles of each. I found I started with .08 moles of NaOH and .05 moles of H2S, subtracted them to get .03 moles of NaOH. Then .03 / (.5 + .8) to get the concentration (total volume), then because all that's left is strong base I took the -log(.023) and then subtracted that from 14 to get the pH. I keep ending up with 12.36 but the answer is 13.1. I need to be able to do this for my exam tomarrow, can anyone help?
 
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What are k1 and k2?
 
Ka values, it is a polyprotic acid meaning its Hydrogens leave in steps and it has a different Ka value for each Hydrogen.
 
Well, I've not studied chemistry for quite a while now, but your reasoning seems fine to me. Sorry I can't be anymore help, but perhaps someone with a Chemistry background will read this and be able to help!
 
cristo said:
Well, I've not studied chemistry for quite a while now, but your reasoning seems fine to me. Sorry I can't be anymore help, but perhaps someone with a Chemistry background will read this and be able to help!
No - the reasoning is incorrect. H2S is not a strong base. It is a weak acid. Therefore it will disassociate in two steps, each one with a different Ka value.

Write an equation for equilibrium concentrations for the reaction which produces a hydronium ion and a deprotonated hydrogen sulfide. Then write another one which produces the hydronium ion and the sulfide ion. (Remember that in between these two reactions, the hydronium concentration is retained.)

It's a polyprotic disassociation, as you said.
 
H2S <==> HS + H

HS <==> H + S

I did this and I calculated the concentration of H at both steps
I don't know how this helps me though the concentration of the H ends up being around 1 x 10^-4.
 
physstudent1 said:

Homework Statement



A vessel contains 500mL of .1 molar H2S solution. For H2S Ka1 = 1 x 10^-7
Ka2 = 1.3 x 10^-13.

What will the pH be when 800mL of .1molar NaOH has been added.



Homework Equations



ph = -log([H])
ph = pka + log(B/A)


The Attempt at a Solution


This is how I started, I found the moles of each. I found I started with .08 moles of NaOH and .05 moles of H2S, subtracted them to get .03 moles of NaOH. Then .03 / (.5 + .8) to get the concentration (total volume), then because all that's left is strong base I took the -log(.023) and then subtracted that from 14 to get the pH. I keep ending up with 12.36 but the answer is 13.1. I need to be able to do this for my exam tomarrow, can anyone help?

You have .1 mole equivalent amount of acid and .08 moles of NaOH, in relative terms, which mean that after the NaOH has been consumed, you're going to be left with concentrations of S 2- and HS-...use the Henderson Hasselbach equation using the second Ka to find the pH of the resulting solution.
 
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