Two pH questions i don't understand

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A 0.001 M solution of Ba(OH)2 has a higher pH than a 0.001 M solution of NaOH due to Ba(OH)2 providing more hydroxide ions. For the second question, a 1.0 × 10^-8 M solution of HCl will have a pH less than 7 because the concentration of H+ ions from water must be considered, making the effective concentration higher than just the HCl contribution. The confusion arises from calculating pH directly from the concentration without accounting for the autoionization of water. Understanding stoichiometry helps clarify the number of moles of OH- in Ba(OH)2, which is crucial for determining pH accurately. The discussion emphasizes the importance of considering all sources of H+ and OH- ions in pH calculations.
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Homework Statement


1) Which solution has the higher pH, a 0.001 M solution of NaOH or a 0.001 M solution of Ba(OH)2?

2) Would a 1.0 × 10-8M solution of HCl have pH < 7,
pH = 7, or pH > 7? My professor said she shouldn't have put HCl as the solution, but that it doesn't matter apparently.

Homework Equations



The Attempt at a Solution


1) answer is: A 0.001 M solution of Ba(OH)2 has the higher pH

2) answer is: pH < 7

My question:

For 1) How do i determine this? I have no idea how

For 2) I'm doing pH = -log[1.0 x 10-8] and I am getting pH = 8. How is the answer less than 7?
 
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AMan24 said:
1.0 × 10-8M solution
Of what?
AMan24 said:
How do i determine this? I have no idea how
Are you conversant with the concepts of stoichiometry?
 
Bystander said:
Of what?
Are you conversant with the concepts of stoichiometry?
It was HCl but she said it doesn't matter.

Yes i know stoichiometry
 
Please DO NOT edit. It makes it impossible to follow discussions.

And if the solute were a base? It matters.
What does stoichiometry tell you?
 
Bystander said:
Please DO NOT edit. It makes it impossible to follow discussions.

And if the solute were a base? It matters.
What does stoichiometry tell you?
I guess I could find the number of moles of OH in each of the molecules using molarity. And the Ba(OH)2 would have 2x the number of moles. If that's right then I could also figure it out if it were two different molarities.
 
Answer to 2 follows directly from definition of pH, and the one you give, I don't know whether it is yours or what you were told, seems wrong to me.

For 1 you are on the right lines; what do you think are the molarities of everything that is there in that Ba(OH)2 solution?
 
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