A 100.00 mL buffer solution at pH 7.80 is prepared such that the [H2CO3] + [HCO3] = 1.000 M. Determine how much strong acid 1.00M HCI or strong base 1.000 M NaOH must be added to change the pH to 7.40. The step-wise acid dissociation constants for carbonic acid are Ka1= 4.2*10^-7 ; Ka2= 4.8*10^-11.
A 100.00 mL buffer solution at pH 7.80 is prepared such that the [H2CO3] + [HCO3]...
The pH of blood plasma is 7.40. The principal buffer system is HCO3?/H2CO3. Calculate the ratio [HCO3?]/[H2CO3] in blood plasma. (Ka of H2CO3, carbonic acid, is 4.5 × 10?7) Enter your answer in the provided box.
Calculate the pH and the concentrations of all species present (H2CO3, HCO3 – , CO3 2– , H3O + , and OH– ) in a 0.0037 M M carbonic acid solution. Ka1 = 4.3 × 10–7 ; Ka2 = 5.6 × 10–11
The pH of a bicarbonate-carbonic acid buffer is 6.62. Calculate the ratio of the concentration of carbonic acid ( H2CO3 ) to that of the bicarbonate ion ( HCO3− ). ( Ka1 of carbonic acid is 4.2 × 10−7. ) [ H2CO3 ]/ [ HCO3− ] =
The pH of a bicarbonate-carbonic acid buffer is 5.96. Calculate the ratio of the concentration of carbonic acid (H2CO3) to that of the bicarbonate ion (HCO3−).(Ka1 of carbonic acid is 4.2 × 10−7.) [ H2CO3 ] [ HCO3− ] =
You need 100.00 mL of a buffer at pH 10.50 based on carbonate (H2CO3; ka1 = 4.3 x 10^-7, ka2 = 5.6 x 10^-11). you have available the following materials: solid sodium bicarbonate (84.006 g/mol), 2.000 M HCl, and 2.000 M NaOH and of course di water. To ensure adequate buffering capacity, the buffer component present at lower concentration should be at 0.200 M. provide a recipie indicating volumes of liquids and/or masses of solids for technician to use in...
A buffer solution is prepared by dissolving 1.000 g of sodium acetate (CH2COONa) into 100.00 mL of a 0.100 M solution of acetic acid. Then 1.80 mL of a 10.00 M solution of hydrochloric acid is added to the acetic acid/sodium acetate buffer solution. The K, of acetic acid is 1.8 x 10-5. What is the pH of the solution after adding HCI? pH
You create a 1 L solution of 0.1 M H2CO3. carbonic acid, H2CO3, is a diprotic acid with Ka1 = 4.5 x 10-7 and Ka2 = 4.7 x 10-11. a) What will the initial pH of the solution be? b) What volume of 0.1 M NaOH will you need to add to reach the second equivalence point( remember carbonic acid deprotonates to bicarbonate HCO3- and then can deprotonate further to CO32-? c) At the second equivalence point, what will the...
What is the pH of a 0.10 M solution of carbonic acid? Carbonic acid, H2CO3 has two acidic protons: H2CO3 + H2O7 HCO3 + H30+ Ka1 = 4.3x10-7 HCO3 + H202 CO32- + H30+ Ka2 = 5.6x10-11 a) 1.00 b) 0.70 c) 6.37 d) 3.68 e) I still can't figure this out...
Calculate the pH and concentration of species present in a polyprotic acid solution.For a 3.44×10-3 M solution ofH2CO3, calculate both the pH and the CO32- ion concentration.H2CO3 + H2O → H3O+ +HCO3-Ka1 = 4.2×10-7HCO3- + H2O → H3O+ +CO32-Ka2 = 4.8×10-11pH =[CO32-] =
a) Find the concentration of H+, HCO3- and CO32-, in a 0.01M solution of carbonic acid if the pH of this is 4.18. Ka1 (H2CO3) =4.45 x 10–7 and Ka2 =4.69 x 10–11 (b) Calculate the pH at the equivalence point of the titration between 0.1M CH3COOH (25 ml) with 0.05 M NaOH. Ka (CH3COOH) = 1.8 x 10–5.