Is my pH calculation for a solution of HCl and NaOH accurate?

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The pH calculation for a solution of 100 mL 0.102 M HCl and 100 mL 0.0780 M NaOH involves determining the moles of HCl and NaOH present. The initial calculations show 0.0102 moles of HCl and 0.0078 moles of NaOH, indicating NaOH is the limiting reagent. After neutralization, 0.0024 moles of HCl remain, leading to a concentration of 0.012 M HCl in the final 200 mL solution. The resulting pH is calculated to be 1.92, reflecting the strong acid's complete dissociation. The discussion emphasizes the importance of considering the stoichiometry and volume changes in pH calculations.
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I have calculated the PH-value for this following solution:

100 mL 0,102 M HCL and 100 mL 0,0780 M NaOH.

To calculate the pH in the this solution first I must calculate the number of moles n_{[H_3O^+]}.

n_{[H_3 O^{+}]} = 0,100 L \cdot 0,0102 \ mol/L + 0,100 L \cdot 0,0780 mol/L = 0,018 mol

This means that [H_3 O^{+}] = \frac{0,018 mol}{0,200 L} = 0,09 mol/L

pH for the solution is then pH = \textrm{-log}(0,09) = 1,05

I would appreciate if somebody would look at my calculation and then tell me if its accurate ??

Many thanks in advance.

Sincerely

Fred
 
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HCl+NaOH------> NaCl(aq) + H2O

you need 1 mole of NaOH to neutralize 1 mole of HCl according to the balanced equation.

So you have .102 M HCl which means you have .102 moles HCl/ 1 L of solution so if you have 100 mL of .102 M HCL you have .102 moles HCl/1 L soln x 1L soln/1000mL x 100mL= .0102 moles of HCl. Doing the same thing for NaOH, you have .0078 moles of NaOH. Since NaOH and HCl react in a 1:1 ratio you can obviously see that NaOH is the limiting reagent. Thus .0102moles HCl-.0078 moles HCl =.0024 moles of HCl left. Now I am assuming that you are supposed to assume that 100 mL of HCl+100mL of NaOH=200 mL solution to make things easier, but in reality volumes don't add. Anyway assuming that they do, you have .0024 moles HCl/200mL solution x 1000mL/1L =.012 M HCl so pH=-log[H+]=-log[.012]=1.92
 
Also, HCl is a strong acid so it will dissociate completely
 
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HCl + NaOH --> Na+(aq) + Cl-(aq) + H2O

Na and Cl won't react and form NaCl because the corresponding base of a strong acid is weak and the corresponding acid of a base is also weak, so the formula for those who react is:

H+ + OH- --> H20
 
Thats why I wrote NaCl (aq). That implies that the Na and Cl split apart into ions.
 
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