Chemical Forums
Chemistry Forums for Students => Undergraduate General Chemistry Forum => Topic started by: AL on October 22, 2010, 12:46:12 PM
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Hi,
I am having trouble getting started with this problem. I hope my equation is correct at least. If I have a 20,000 mg/L of barium in solution, what is the amount of sulfuric acid to pull out all the barium as barium sulfate?
Ba + H2SO4 --> BaSO4 + 2H
I appreciate any help to get me started. Thank you!
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Is it present as a metal, not in ionic form?
Not that it changes final result.
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Right, as a metal.
So since 20,000 mg/L Ba2+ = 0.1456 mol Ba2+ and it reacts in a 1:1 ratio with sulfuric acid, does that mean I would also need 0.1456 mol/L sulfuric acid in order to get all the barium to precipitate as barium sulfate?
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1:1 stoichiometry, that's right.