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Offline cubejunkies

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Acid Base & Equilibrium Problems
« on: April 02, 2011, 10:07:13 PM »
My Chemistry teacher today gave us this set of problems today as a "quiz" for our test on Tuesday, and he generated it using a program which he makes all of his tests from. Therefore, he told us that the "quiz" we got today would have extremely similar problems with the text that's on Monday, however, the only down side is that he won't grade these quizzes or post an answer key anywhere, so I really would like to know which of the problems on this "quiz" I got right and wrong, that way I can better prepare for the real deal on Monday. Feel free to check only a few of the problems, as this is quite the lengthy quiz relatively speaking, but if you want to check all of my answers, that's ok too. For starters, however, I didn't get 6, 20, or 26 at all, explanations for why are inside the problem below.

Thanks!

1. Calculate the concentration of chloride ions in a saturated lead (II) chloride (Ksp = 2.4 x 10-4) solution.

7.8 x 10-2 M

2. Identify the conjugate base of HSO4- in the reaction
          H2PO4- + HSO4-  ::equil::  H3PO4 + SO42-

SO42-

3. Which one of the following salts will form an acidic solution on dissolving in water?

A. KOH
B. NaCN
C. NaF
D. FeCl3
E. LiBr

4. In the reaction H2CO3 + H2::equil::  HCO3- + H3O+, the Bronsted acids are

H3O+ and H2CO3

5. Which solution will have the lowest pH?

A. 0.10 M NaCl
B. 0.10 M HCN
C. 0.10 M NaOH
D. 0.10 M H2CO3
E. 0.10 M HNO3

6. What is the pH of a 0.014 M Ca(OH)2 solution?

(NOTE: I didn't know how to do this one because I know that Ca(OH)2 is only slightly soluble in water, but a Ksp value wasn't given, and he said any equilibrium constants we needed would be provided. Is this perhaps a teacher mistake, or is there an alternate way of solving this problem without a Ksp value?)

7. What is the pH at the equivalence point in the titration of 100 mL of 0.10 M HCl with 0.10 M NaOH?

7.0

8. Acid strength decreases in the series: HCl > HSO4- > HCN. Which of these species is strongest base?

A. HCN
B. SO42-
C. CN-
D. Cl-

9. Consider the weak bases below and their Kb values:
C6H7O     Kb= 1.3 x 10-10
C2H5NH2     Kb= 5.6 x 10-4
C5H5N     Kb= 1.7 x 10-9

Arrange the conjugate acids of these weak bases in order of increasing acid strength

C2H5NH3+ < C5H5NH+ < C6H7OH

10. What is the pH of a 0.20 M solution of NH4Cl? [Kb(NH3) = 1.8 x 10-5]

4.98

11. Which one of these salts will form a neutral solution on dissolving in water?

A. KNO2
B. NH4NO3
C. NaCl
D. NaCN
E. FeCl3

12. Which one of the following combinations cannot function as a buffer solution?

A. HNO3 and NaNO3
B. HNO2 and NaNO2
C. HCN and KCN
D. HF and NaF
E. NH3 and (NH4)2SO4

13. Which one of the following is a buffer solution?

A. 0.20 M CH3COOH
B. 0.10 M KCN
C. 0.40 M HCN and 0.10 M KCN
D. 1.0 M HNO3 and 1.0 M NaNO3
E. 0.50 M HCl and 0.10 M NaCl

14. Which of the following yields an acidic solution when dissolved in water?

A. Ca(OH)2
B. K2O
C. NaCl
D. LiOH
E. NO2

15. Which of these species will act as a Lewis acid?

A. NH4+
B. NH3
C. H2O
D. BF3
E. F-

16. The pOH of a solution is 10.40 Calculate the hydrogen ion concentration in the solution.

2.5 x 10-4 M

17. Which one of these salts will form a basic solution upon dissolving in water?

A. NH4NO3
B. NaCL
C. NaNO2
D. AlCl3
E. KBr

18. Calculate the pH of a buffer solution prepared by dissolving 0.20 mol of NaCNO and 1.0 mol of HCNO in enough water to make 1.0 L of solution. [Ka(HCNO) = 2.0 x 10-4]

3.0

19. Consider a buffer solution prepared from HOCl and NaOCL. What is the net ionic equation for the reaction that occurs when NaOH is added to this buffer?

OH- + HOCl  :rarrow: H2O + OCl-

20. You have 500.0 mL of a buffer solution containing 0.20 M acetic acid and 0.30 M sodium acetate. What will the pH of this solution be after the addition of 20.0 mL of 1.00 M NaOH solution? [Ka(CH3COOH) = 1.8 x 10-5]

I got 4.97 but this isn't one of the choices.

A. 5.07
B. 4.56
C. 4.74
D. 4.41
E. 4.92 (<- I calculated that this is the pH of the buffer system before the addition of NaOH)

21. The molar solubility of manganese (II) carbonate is 4.2 x 10-6 M. What is the Ksp for this compound?

1.8 x 10-11

22. Calculate the hydrogen ion conentration in a solution having a pH of 4.60

2.5 x 10-5 M

23. Write a chemical reaction representing the reaction of a weak acid with a weak base.

HCN (aq) + CH3NH2 (aq) :rarrow: CH3NH3+ (aq) + CN- (aq)

24. Write the formula for the conjugate base of H2PO4-

HPO42-

25. The Ksp of CaF2 is 4 x 10-11. What is the maximum concentration of Ca2+ possible in a 0.10 M NaF solution?

8 x 10-10 M

26. Calculate the pH at the equivalence point for the titration of 0.25 M CH3COOH with 0.25 M NaOH. (For CH3COOH, Ka = 1.8 x 10-5)

I don't know how to do this one without the number of milliliters that was present during the titration, as this affects the amount of salt formed at the equivalence point, which is what is purely responsible for the pH at the equivalence point in this case.

27. If the pH of stomach acid is 1.0, what is the hydroxide ion concentration in this solution?

10-3 M

28. Identify the conjugate acid-base pairs in the reaction
     HSO4- + HF ::equil:: H2SO4 + F-

HSO4- and H2SO4
HF and F-

29. If the pH of tomato juice is 4.0, what is the hydroxide ion concentration in this solution?

10-10 M

Offline Borek

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Re: Acid Base & Equilibrium Problems
« Reply #1 on: April 03, 2011, 05:08:13 AM »
6. What is the pH of a 0.014 M Ca(OH)2 solution?

(NOTE: I didn't know how to do this one because I know that Ca(OH)2 is only slightly soluble in water, but a Ksp value wasn't given, and he said any equilibrium constants we needed would be provided. Is this perhaps a teacher mistake, or is there an alternate way of solving this problem without a Ksp value?)

0.014 is given as a concentration - I read it as you don't have to worry about Ksp, assume solution is either saturated or below saturation.

Quote
20. You have 500.0 mL of a buffer solution containing 0.20 M acetic acid and 0.30 M sodium acetate. What will the pH of this solution be after the addition of 20.0 mL of 1.00 M NaOH solution? [Ka(CH3COOH) = 1.8 x 10-5]

I got 4.97 but this isn't one of the choices.

A. 5.07
B. 4.56
C. 4.74
D. 4.41
E. 4.92 (<- I calculated that this is the pH of the buffer system before the addition of NaOH)

Hard to tell not knowing what you did. When you add strong base you remove acid (it becomes neutralized) and you create salt (conjugate base, product of neutralization). Common mistake is to omit one of the changes in the calculations.

Quote
26. Calculate the pH at the equivalence point for the titration of 0.25 M CH3COOH with 0.25 M NaOH. (For CH3COOH, Ka = 1.8 x 10-5)

I don't know how to do this one without the number of milliliters that was present during the titration, as this affects the amount of salt formed at the equivalence point, which is what is purely responsible for the pH at the equivalence point in this case.

Initial volumes don't matter as final concentration will depend only on the initial concentration ratio. As both titrant and titrated substance have the same concentration you need to mix the solution in 1:1 ratio, that means diluting 1:2.
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