Solveeit Logo

Question

Question: 50 g of a sample of \(\text{NaOH}\) required for complete neutralization of 1N \(\text{HCl}\). What ...

50 g of a sample of NaOH\text{NaOH} required for complete neutralization of 1N HCl\text{HCl}. What is the percentage purity of NaOH\text{NaOH}?

Explanation

Solution

To find the purity of NaOH\text{NaOH}, the equivalents of NaOH\text{NaOH} need to be calculated. After finding the equivalents of NaOH\text{NaOH} the percentage purity can be directly calculated by the formula: theoretical weightsample weight×100\frac{\text{theoretical weight}}{\text{sample weight}}\times 100

Complete answer:
The question that comes to our minds is ‘What is percentage purity’? Percentage purity is the percentage of material actually useful or desired that is present in the sample. It can be calculated by the formula : weight of pure compound in sampletotal weight of impure sample×100\frac{\text{weight of pure compound in sample}}{\text{total weight of impure sample}}\times 100.

Step (1)- Find the equivalents- Let us calculate the mass of pure NaOH\text{NaOH} in the sample. It will be calculated by calculating the equivalents of NaOH\text{NaOH} that are required for neutralization of NaOH\text{NaOH} with HCl\text{HCl}. The reaction of neutralization of HCl\text{HCl} with NaOH\text{NaOH} is NaOH+HClNaCl+H2O\text{NaOH}+\text{HCl}\to \text{NaCl}+{{\text{H}}_{2}}\text{O}.

Step (2)- Calculate Molar masses- The reaction of neutralization made it clear that the moles of NaOH\text{NaOH} and moles of HCl\text{HCl} required for the complete neutralization are the same. That is 1 mole of NaOH\text{NaOH} requires 1 mole of HCl\text{HCl} in the neutralization process. 1 mole of NaOH\text{NaOH} weighs
- Atomic mass of Na\text{Na} is 23 grams.
- Atomic mass of O\text{O} is 16 grams.
- Atomic mass of H\text{H} is 1 gram. The molecular mass of NaOH\text{NaOH} is 23+16+1 is equal to 40 grams. So, 1 mole of NaOH\text{NaOH} weighs 40 grams. Thus, 40 grams of NaOH\text{NaOH} is required for complete neutralization.

Step (3)- 1N of means 1M of HCl\text{HCl} because the n-factor of HCl\text{HCl} is 1. So, the equivalent mass of HCl\text{HCl} is equal to its molar mass similarly, with NaOH\text{NaOH} the n-factor is 1. So, the molar mass will be equal to equivalent mass. 1 equivalent of NaOH\text{NaOH} is equal to 40 grams of NaOH\text{NaOH} which has taken part in the reaction. The mass of pure NaOH\text{NaOH} that reacted with HCl\text{HCl} in the reaction is 40 grams.

Step (4)- Applying the formula of percentage purity, we will find the percentage of how much NaOH\text{NaOH} is pure.
We are given that the total impure mass of NaOH\text{NaOH} in the sample is 50 grams. Apply the formula;
Percentage purity= weight of pure compound in sampletotal weight of impure sample×100\frac{\text{weight of pure compound in sample}}{\text{total weight of impure sample}}\times 100
Substitute the required values in the formula, we will get,
Percentage purity=4050×100\frac{40}{50}\times 100, the zero will be cancelled the expression is now, 4005\frac{400}{5}, which will be cancelled by 5. The purity percentage comes out to be 80%.
Hence, the Percentage purity of NaOH\text{NaOH} in the sample is 80%.

Note:
Do not misunderstand the term percentage purity with yield percentage, as the formula is almost similar. But percentage purity is for finding the purity of a substance in the sample. But in yield percentage, how much product is obtained that needs to be found out.

Yield percentage= actual yieldtheoretical yield×100\frac{\text{actual yield}}{\text{theoretical yield}}\times 100 whereas Percentage purity= weight of pure compound in sampletotal weight of impure sample×100\frac{\text{weight of pure compound in sample}}{\text{total weight of impure sample}}\times 100