Finding Ka of Monoprotic Acid using information from titration

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the acid dissociation constant (Ka) of a monoprotic acid using titration data. The pH at the equivalence point is given as 8.12 after titrating a 0.1M monoprotic acid with a 0.1M strong base. The equivalence point occurs at 200 mL total volume, with the half equivalence point at 150 mL. The user successfully determines Ka by relating it to Kb and using the concentration of the salt formed during the titration. The final calculated Ka is approximately 1.45 x 10^-5, which aligns closely with the textbook value of 1.5 x 10^-5.
Orims
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
1. This problem has been slowly eating me for the past 2 hours. I've done everything I can but I can't seem to answer it. The pH at the equivalence point in the titration of 100 mL of a 0.1M monoprotic acid solution with a 0.1M strong base solution is 8.12 at 25 degrees C. What is the Ka of the acid?



I know the Ka of the acid can be found using pH= pKa + log ([A-]/[HA]) but only if it is before the equivalence point.



3. I found out that the equivalence point was when 100 mL of strong base have been added (same molarity as weak acid, so equivalence point = double the volume of initial acid solution). This would make the half equivalence point 150 mL.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
What if I will reword the question for you: what is Ka of a weak acid, if 0.05M solution of its salt has pH 8.12?
 
Thank you! I finally got it!

I used the fact that [OH-] ~= sqroot(Kb X [A-]), so I got [OH] from pOH and used the fact that since HA and NaOH were in equal volumes and concentrations, the [A-] would be half the concentration of HA. I got Ka from Kb (Ka= Kw/Kb)

In the end I got a Ka of about 1.45x10 to the -5 and my book says the Ka would be 1.5x10 to the -5 (they round up).

Again, thank you!
 
Orims said:
[OH-] ~= sqroot(Kb X [A-])

You should check if conditions needed to use this equation are meet. This is only approximation and it is not always correct.

Calculation of pH of a weak acid/base.
 
Thread 'Confusion regarding a chemical kinetics problem'
TL;DR Summary: cannot find out error in solution proposed. [![question with rate laws][1]][1] Now the rate law for the reaction (i.e reaction rate) can be written as: $$ R= k[N_2O_5] $$ my main question is, WHAT is this reaction equal to? what I mean here is, whether $$k[N_2O_5]= -d[N_2O_5]/dt$$ or is it $$k[N_2O_5]= -1/2 \frac{d}{dt} [N_2O_5] $$ ? The latter seems to be more apt, as the reaction rate must be -1/2 (disappearance rate of N2O5), which adheres to the stoichiometry of the...
Back
Top