Question
Question: pH of pure water is _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ A. \(0\) B. \(1\) C. \(7\) D. \(14\)...
pH of pure water is _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
A. 0
B. 1
C. 7
D. 14
Solution
Hint: To a very small but very important extent, water is a weak acid that ionizes to hydrogen and hydroxide ions. This equilibrium reaction has the equation: .
Formula used : , [H+]=[OH−]=1×10−7M and pH=−log10[H+]
Complete answer:
Pure water all by itself is always neutral pH, neither acidic or basic. Water molecules must always ionize to H+ and OH- in equal amounts. The H+ and OH- ion concentrations will be the same .
The neutral pH of water is 7.0 at about 25∘C or about 77∘F.
The very tiny fraction of water molecules that ionize in a volume of water varies with temperature. As the temperature goes up molecules get more active and ionize more.
The “neutral pH” of pure water becomes less than 7 at temperatures above 25∘C(the concentration of [H+] ion increases) and greater than 7 at colder temperatures below 25∘C(the concentration of [H+] ions decreases)
The “pH” is a measure of the [H+] ion concentration at a given temperature . The pH is a clever way to change very small numbers into a number scale from 0 to 14 and is given by this equation .
pH=−log10[H+]
Because of this variation of pH with temperature , to be accurate a reference temperature must always be included when reporting pH values.
Note: A neutral solution is one that is neither acidic nor basic. The hydrogen ion concentration equals the hydroxide ion concentration, and both equal 1×10−7M. In a neutral solution, the, pH=pOH=7. The hydrogen ion concentration is greater than 1×10−7M and the hydroxide ion concentration is less than 1×10−7M. In terms of pH, an article solution has a pH less than 7.