Question
Question: 100ml of 0.1 M \(NaOH\) is added to 100 ml of a 0.2 M \[C{{H}_{3}}COOH\] solution. The pH of the res...
100ml of 0.1 M NaOH is added to 100 ml of a 0.2 M CH3COOH solution. The pH of the resulting solution will be (pKa=4.74).
Solution
Hint: A mixture of acetic acid and sodium acetate act as a buffer solution and since in this reaction sodium hydroxide is reacting with acetic acid producing sodium acetate.
Therefore, the overall solution is acting as a buffer solution as when acetic acid and sodium acetate are present in the same medium, they act as buffers in each other’s presence.
Complete step-by-step answer:
The overall reaction when NaOH is reacting with CH3COOH is shown as:
NaOH+CH3COOH→CH3COONa+H2O
The moles reacting of each species are given by:
nOH−=c×v=0.1×1000100=0.01
nCH3COOH=c×v=0.2×1000100=0.02
Therefore, moles of NaOH are 0.01 moles and moles of CH3COOH is 0.02 moles. It shows that they are added in 1:2 mole ratios in the equation. Therefore, no moles of CH3COONa are formed of 0.01 moles. No of moles of CH3COOH used will be 0.01 moles as 0.01 mole of reacts with 0.01 mole of CH3COOH to give 0.01 mole of CH3COONa.
Since, it is a buffer solution, so we will apply Henderson HasselBalch equation written below:
pH=pKa+logacidsalt
pH=4.74+log1
pH=4.74
So, 4.74 is the pH of the resulting solution. The solution is bit acidic as its pH is less than the 7.
Note: In the above problem the mixture is acting as a buffer solution. Buffer solution comprises weak acid and its conjugate base or weak base and its conjugate acid.
In the above question sodium acetate is a weak basic salt while acetic acid is a conjugate acid of it. So it acts as a good buffer for weak acidic solutions. This can be solved by the Henderson HasselBalch equation which is pH=pKa+logacidsalt.