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Topic: Find Ka for acid  (Read 2803 times)

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Offline neon

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Find Ka for acid
« on: April 23, 2014, 02:33:10 AM »
A solution contains 0.09 M HCl, 0.09M CHCl2COOH and 0.1M CH3COOH. The pH of the solution is 1. If Ka for acetic acid is 10-5, then find Ka for CHCl2COOH.

I am trying to use the formula
[itex][H+] = \sqrt{K_1C_1+K_2C_2+C_3} [/itex]

If the above equation is incorrect then please give me some hints to solve the problem.

Offline Borek

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Re: Find Ka for acid
« Reply #1 on: April 23, 2014, 02:57:12 AM »
Formula doesn't look reasonable to me - it would mean in the case of just HCl concentration of H+ would equal square root of the acid concentration, which is clearly wrong.

Assume HCl is fully dissociated. If so, concentration of H+ is a sum of three H+ concentrations - 0.09 from HCl, x from acetic acid and y from dichloroacetic acid. That gives first equation:

[tex]x + y + 0.09 = 10^{-1}[/tex]

You can get two more equations using ICE tables for acetic acid and dichloroacetic acid dissociations (construct ICE tables using x and y).

That will give three equations in three unknowns. Solve.

And remember: I never said it will be easy to solve. Most likely it will be quite difficult without some approximations or numerical treatment.
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