What Challenges Arise in Calculating pH Changes in Buffer Solutions?

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Calculating pH changes in buffer solutions involves understanding the equilibrium reactions and the effects of added acids or bases. In the case of a buffer made from NH3 and NH4+, the initial pH can be determined using Kb and pOH calculations. When adding hydrochloric acid, the challenge lies in determining how the moles of NH3 and NH4+ are affected, specifically whether to subtract from NH3 or NH4+. The discussion also touches on the acidity of rantidinium chloride, questioning whether its solution is acidic or neutral based on its components. Lastly, hydrolysis considerations for various ions are explored, emphasizing that hydrolysis does not occur for conjugate acids or bases of strong acids or bases.
dekoi
1.) What is the pH of a buffer solution that is 0.10 NH3 and 0.10 NH4+? What is the pH if 12mL of 0.20 M hydrochloric acid is added to 125 mL of buffer?

For the first part, i figured that NH3 is the base and NH4+ is the conjugate acid. Therefore, the equil. reaction is NH3 + water --> NH4+ OH-. Using the given concentrations, i found Kb, pOH, and then Ph.

For the second part, I'm unsure. I figured out the moles of NH3 and NH4+ by multiplying each molarity by 0.125 L. Then i did the same for H3O+ ion (formed by HCl) using 12mL as the volume. However, the problem appears as I'm unsure whether the addition of HCl will depleat the amount of NH4+ or NH3. Should i subtract the moles of the hydronium ion from the moles of NH3 and add it to NH4+? Or the other way around?2.) A chloride salt (rantidinium chloride) is presnet in Zantac. Should a solution of rantidinium chloride be acidic, basic, or neutral?

This is my logic: Since chloride ion forms an acidic solution with Hyrdogen (that is, its a conjugate base of a strong acid), then the solution should be acidic. But i need to consider rantidinium as well, and see whether that is an anion of a strong base, in which case the solution would be neutral. But how do i do that?

3.) I have to determine whether hydrolysis would occur with the following:

a.) NO3-
b.) OCl-
c.) NH2NH3+
d.) Br-


a.) Since NO3- is a conjugate base of a strong acid, no hydrolysis would occur.
b.) Since OCl- is a conjugate base of a weak acid (HClO), hydrolysis does happen.
c.) I have no idea!
d.) Since HBr is a strong acid, no hydrolysis happens.

My questions are: i.) Why does hydrolysis not happen when an ion is a conjugate acid/base of a strong acid/base? and ii.) Part C.Thank you.
 
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