April 25, 2024, 04:52:00 AM
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Topic: simple question involving finding the molar mass of an unknown diprotic acid  (Read 9952 times)

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Offline brycebb

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You have 0.954g of an unknown acid H2A, which reacts with NaOH according to the balanced equation: H2A+2NaOH--->Na2A +2H2O.  If 36.04ml of 0.509M NaOH is required to titrate the acid to the second equivalence point, what is the molar mass of the acid?


I know you set it up like this,
0.03604L(0.509mol/L NaOH)(1mol H2A/ 2mol NaOH)= 0.00917218mol H2A.  Now I know this is not the correct mol value unless this were a monoprotic acid, but since it is diprotic you must do something to this value.  I assumed you divide this value by 2, to get one mol, then take 0.954g/0.00458609mol to get 208.8 g/mol.  Now the answer in the book is 104g/mol which is half of this value, can someone help me and show what I did wrong?

Offline JustinCh3m

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for every "1mol H2A", there are how many moles of H+?

Offline brycebb

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for every "1mol H2A", there are how many moles of H+?
I figured it out now, thanks

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