How to Prepare a 1 M Acetic Buffer with a pH of 6.0

AI Thread Summary
To prepare a 500 ml acetic buffer at 1 M and pH 6.0, the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation is used to determine the ratio of acetate to acetic acid, which is approximately 17.37. This ratio indicates that for every mole of acetic acid, there are about 17.37 moles of acetate. The total moles must equal 0.5 moles for the 1 M concentration, leading to the calculation of 0.0272 moles of acetic acid and 0.473 moles of acetate needed. The corresponding volumes are 27.2 ml of 1 M acetic acid, and the acetate is calculated using its molecular weight. Finally, both components are combined in a 500 ml volumetric flask and diluted with distilled water to the mark.
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Homework Statement



Prepare 500ml acetic buffer with a concentration of 1 M and a pH o 6.0. (pKa for acetic acis is 4.76; molecular weight for actetic acid is 60g/mol and for sodium acetate is 136g/mol)

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


I have tried the Henderson Hasselbalch equation. I have no Idea what to do. Please Help...
 
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Use the Henderson-Hasselbalch to first find the ratio of acetate / acetic acid molarity. This is also the ratio of the number of moles of each.

The sum of the two molarities should equal 1.0 M.

You must find a way to rearrange one equation and plug it into the other. Post back if you need more help.
 
Must I work out the [HA] and [A] and then work oout the molarity using n=m/MW?
 
Using Henderson-Hasselbalch, we find that [acetate] / [acetic acid] = 17.37

This ratio also applies to the number of moles of each, so moles acetate / moles acetic acid = 17.37

Rearranging this equation, we find that: moles acetate = moles acetic acid * 17.37

Since the concentration of the buffer is 1M, we know that: moles acetate + moles acetic acid / 0.5L = 1.0M

The next step is to take the rearranged equation and plug it into the equation directly above.

17.37 * moles acetic acid + moles acetic acid / 0.5L = 1.0M

Simplified: 18.37 * moles acetic acid / 0.5L = 1.0M

Solving for the moles of acetic acid gives: 0.0272 moles acetic acid that need to be used in the buffer.

Next solve for the number of moles of acetate: 0.0272 * 17.37 = 0.473 moles of acetate.

Take the number of moles of acetate and multiply it times the molecular weight to get the amount of grams you need to add to the buffer.

0.0272 moles of acetic acid would come out to 27.2 ml of 1M acetic acid.

You add the acetate and acetic acid to a clean 500 ml volumetric flask and dilute to volume with distilled h20.

I hope that helped.
 
Thanks a mill.
 
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