How much Silver Nitrate to produce a precipitate?

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To produce a precipitate of Ag2CrO4 from 2.50L of 0.020M K2CrO4, the minimum amount of AgNO3 required is calculated using the solubility product constant (Ksp) of 9.0 x 10-12. The equilibrium concentration of CrO4-2 is found to be 1.31 x 10-4 M, leading to an equilibrium concentration of Ag+ at 2.62 x 10-4 M. The initial concentration of Ag+ needed is determined to be 0.040M, resulting in a mass of 17 grams of AgNO3. However, further clarification reveals that the correct amount needed is actually 0.0090 grams. The discussion highlights the importance of understanding Ksp and stoichiometry in precipitation reactions.
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Homework Statement



What is the minimum amount of AgNO3, in grams, that has to be added to 2.50L of 0.020M K2CrO4 to produce a precipitate?

Homework Equations



Ksp Ag2CrO4 = 9.0 x 10-12
[Ag+]2[CrO4-2] = 9.0x10-12


The Attempt at a Solution



2AgNO3(aq) + K2CrO4(aq) --> Ag2CrO4(s) + 2KNO3(aq)
Ag2CrO4(s) is the precipitate
The net ionic equation is:
Ag2CrO4(s) --> 2Ag+(aq) + CrO4-2(aq)
Let y represent the concentration of CrO4-2 at equilibrium. The concentration of Ag+ will be 2y due to the 2:1 stoichiometry. Plugging into the solubility equilibrium expression:
[Ag+]2[CrO4-2] = 9.0x10-12
(2y)2(y) = 9.0x10-12
Therefore, y = 1.31 x 10-4 M
So the equilibrium concentration of CrO4-2 is 1.31 x 10-4 M, and the equilibrium concentration of Ag+ is double that, or 2y, or 2.62x10-4M
The initial concentration of CrO4-2 is 0.020M (from the 0.020M K2CrO4). The decrease in concentration of CrO4-2 to form the precipitate is:
0.020M - 1.31 x 10-4M = 0.01987M
The initial concentration of Ag+ (what we're trying to find) decreases by twice this amount, 0.03974M, to reach an equilibrium concentration of 2.62x10-4M (the 2y found earlier).
Initial concentration of Ag+ - 0.03974M = 2.62x10-4M.
Initial concentration = 2.62x10-4M + 0.0397M = 0.040M
Find mass:
0.040M x 2.5L x 170g / mol = 17g
Therefore, 17 g of AgNO3 needs to be added to form a precipitate.
Did I do this correctly? I'm really not sure.<br>
 
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No, it is wrong. You add silver to the solution that contains chromate. Nothing consumes chromate, so its concentration stays constant, and concentration of Ag+ goes up - till you reach solubility product.

Technically when adding silver nitrate as a solution you would dilute chromate a little bit, but we can assume you add it as a solid, not changing solution volume.
 
Oh ok. So you just need 2.62x10-4M of AgNO3.
2.62x10-4M x 2.50L x 170g/mol = 0.11135 grams?
 
No, concentration of silver is much lower than that.

Ksp defines saturated solution concentrations, it doesn't mean ratio of concentrations is given by precipitate stoichiometry. Ksp for AgCl is about 10-10. If you put solid AgCl into water, saturated solution will be 10-5M both in [Ag+] and [Cl-]. However, saturated solution can be also 1M in [Ag+] and 10-10M in [Cl-], or - say - 10-3M in [Ag+] and 10-7M in [Cl-] - if it was prepared by mixing solutions containing these ions in correct quantities.
 
Oh so I made this problem unnecessarily complicated.
[0.020M][Ag+]2 = 9.0x10-12
[Ag+]2 = 2.12x10-5M
2.12x10-5M x 2.5L x 170g/mol = 0.0090 g
 
Is that right?
10 char
 
Yes.
 
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