Chemical Forums
Chemistry Forums for Students => Analytical Chemistry Forum => Topic started by: WorkWork888 on January 23, 2019, 11:56:59 AM
-
Hello,
I am wanting to blend up a mixture of two acid blends from the concentrated form.
10% HCl and 10% Acetic acid together to make 250ml total volume.
C1V1 = C2V2 is used, what happens when I involve two acids together?
THanks
-
Add 25ml acetic acid and 25ml HCl to 200ml water. That gives you 10% volume of each
-
Thanks Jeff,
What about concentration wise?
-
Hello,
I am wanting to blend up a mixture of two acid blends from the concentrated form.
10% HCl and 10% Acetic acid together to make 250ml total volume.
C1V1 = C2V2 is used, what happens when I involve two acids together?
THanks
Your formula would accidentally work correctly only when densities of all solution will be 1.00 g/cm3. This is not the case
(36 $ HCl d=1.18, 100 % glacial acetic acid d=1.05). You should use a formula for calculation concentration given in percentages. The only problem is the density of the final solution - my guess is that a good approximation will be d=1.05.
-
Hello AWK,
Would this work out? or am I going all over the place?
37% HCl ( 20mls of HCL ) = 10% HCl (Volume)
740/ 10 = 74ml of water
74ml - 20mls of HCL = 54 mls of water to add
then add 5.5 ml of glacial acetic acid
-
Without any calculations, the amount of acetic acid should be about 5 times more.
Your calculations should be based on the mass balance.
You should use calculations concerned mass percentage. Your final solution should contain 10 % of pure HCl and 10 % of pure acetic acid.
What is a mass of the final solution with the density of 1.05 g/cm3? What are the masses of pure HCl and acetic acid in this solution?
Forget about a volume of water. After mixing concentrated solutions you should add water up to the final volume 250 cm3 (though calculation will be done for a mass of this solution).