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Topic: Diprotic Acid with Very Close Ka Values  (Read 1829 times)

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Offline Brian Lin

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Diprotic Acid with Very Close Ka Values
« on: March 05, 2015, 09:47:38 PM »
I know that for a diprotic acid with fairly close ka values result in a titration curve of only one break, because "protons will be titrated almost simultaneously". I know their half way points will be so close to each other, further making the curve just one curve, instead of two.

What I don't get is that how can two acids be deprotonated at the same time if "the best base reacts with the best acid since acidity is relative" (quoted directly from Klein's Organic chemistry book). Therefore, shouldn't the base react with the most acidic proton first before reacting with the 2nd proton that is weaker?

I'm not sure what concept I have down wrong, so please help.


Offline Borek

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Re: Diprotic Acid with Very Close Ka Values
« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2015, 03:14:38 AM »
What I don't get is that how can two acids be deprotonated at the same time if "the best base reacts with the best acid since acidity is relative" (quoted directly from Klein's Organic chemistry book). Therefore, shouldn't the base react with the most acidic proton first before reacting with the 2nd proton that is weaker?

Sadly, the book is misleading as quoted. Yes, the strongest bases/acids reacts first, but it doesn't mean other bases/acids don't react at the same time, just to a lesser amount.

Imagine a diprotic acid H2A with dissociation constants Ka1 and Ka2.

[tex]K_{a1} = \frac {[H^+][HA^-]}{[H_2A]}[/tex]

[tex]K_{a2} = \frac {[H^+][A^{2-}]}{[HA^-]}[/tex]

Simple rearrangement of these formulas gives:

[tex]\frac {[HA^-]}{[H_2A]} = \frac {K_{a1}}{[H^+]}[/tex]

[tex]\frac {[A^{2-}]}{[HA^-]} = \frac {K_{a2}}{[H^+]}[/tex]

Assume pKa1 = 4 and pKa2 = 5 (so a diprotic weak acid, with close dissociation constants). Assume pH = 5 (so [H+] = 10-5). You can plug both dissociations constants and concentration of H+ into the right had sides and see, that all three forms of acid (H2A, HA-, A2-) are present, and what their relative amounts are.

Apparently while the strongest acid (H2A) reacted first, the weaker one (HA-) reacted as well.
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