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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 NaOHNaOH is added to 100 ml of a 0.2 M CH3COOHC{{H}_{3}}COOH solution. The pH of the resulting solution will be (pKa=4.74).

Explanation

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 NaOHNaOH is reacting with CH3COOHC{{H}_{3}}COOH is shown as:
NaOH+CH3COOHCH3COONa+H2ONaOH+C{{H}_{3}}COOH\to C{{H}_{3}}COONa+{{H}_{2}}O
The moles reacting of each species are given by:
nOH=c×v=0.1×1001000=0.01{{n}_{O{{H}^{-}}}}=c\times v=0.1\times \dfrac{100}{1000}=0.01
nCH3COOH=c×v=0.2×1001000=0.02{{n}_{C{{H}_{3}}COOH}}=c\times v=0.2\times \dfrac{100}{1000}=0.02

Therefore, moles of NaOHNaOH are 0.01 moles and moles of CH3COOHC{{H}_{3}}COOH is 0.02 moles. It shows that they are added in 1:2 mole ratios in the equation. Therefore, no moles of CH3COONaC{{H}_{3}}COONa are formed of 0.01 moles. No of moles of CH3COOHC{{H}_{3}}COOH used will be 0.01 moles as 0.01 mole of reacts with 0.01 mole of CH3COOHC{{H}_{3}}COOH to give 0.01 mole of CH3COONaC{{H}_{3}}COONa.
Since, it is a buffer solution, so we will apply Henderson HasselBalch equation written below:
pH=pKa+logsaltacidpH = p{{K}_{a}}+\log \dfrac{salt}{acid}
pH=4.74+log1pH = 4.74+\log 1
pH=4.74pH = 4.74
So, 4.744.74 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+logsaltacidpH=p{{K}_{a}}+\log \dfrac{salt}{acid}.