chez_butt23 said:
So after trying again, I used these equations:
1.90 = 2.34 + log [Base]/[0.1] --> 10^-.44 = [Base]/[0.1] --> 0.036 = Base
and
9.70 = 9.60 + log [Base]/[0.1] --> 10^0.1 = [Base]/[0.1] --> 0.126 = Base.
However, 0.126- 0.036 = 0.09.
I believe I am using the wrong [Base] value for the second HH equation, but I do not know how to find it.
You seem to agree now that there are 0.1 moles of glycine.(?)
Usually square [] brackets are used for molarity not for moles, but mole ratios and molarity ratios at least are the same so you might get away with something like your equations if you knew what you were doing and said it clearly.
However, confirming my reservations above about the HH equation you have misinterpreted the meaning of terms in it.
The base, whose molarity appears in the HH equation is the
base form, the form that can accept a proton - in the case of the carboxyl group it is the molarity of -COO
-, [-COO
-] we might call it or [glyCOO
-]. It is not the total molarity of glycine in all its forms. Unless these two things were practically equal. Which they are in one of the four cases I mentioned which you have not considered yet.
So try again, possibly using my previous post as guide.
The whole thing is really no different than if you had a mixture of 0.1 moles of an acid of pK
a 2.3 at pH 1.9 that you had to bring to 9.7, and 0.1 moles of a base of pK
a 9.6 for which you had to do the same thing. So the problem is a pretty minor extension of stuff with acids and bases you must have done in the very previous lesson or chapter.
May I say your work would benefit from setting out more clearly and explicitly what you are doing. Probably you would make fewer mistakes seeing better what your own reasoning is, but also if you make a mistake and got a thing half right you would get half a credit instead of zero if a Prof finds it too hard to follow; not least you would understand and get recall from your own notes or worked examples when you come to revise later.