June 15, 2024, 06:55:06 PM
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Topic: How can I calculate the pH of a solution when it doesn't involve protons?  (Read 3863 times)

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Offline Kalibasa

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Hello :) I know how to calculate the pH of solutions, any kind, when it deals with protons, but I'm stumped by this scenario. I need to find the pH of a 0.055 M solution of AlCl3. I know it is acidic because of the Al 3+ ion, and I'm guessing this has to do with Lewis acids and bases, but I just can't figure it out! If you could just give me the equation at equilibrium, that alone would help and I could do the rest.

Thanks, I really appreciate it!

Offline Borek

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Hydrolysis.
ChemBuddy chemical calculators - stoichiometry, pH, concentration, buffer preparation, titrations.info

Offline BluRay

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Al3+ + nH2O <--> Al(OH)n + nH3O+  ; 1<=n<=3 and n depends on solution's pH.


Offline Kalibasa

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Thank you! :)

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