On titration of weak acid with base to find out the pKa you only have to look upto equivalence point. whwre all acid has been neutralised.
Now initially ther is a buffering region, where conjugate base is converting into conjugate acid, thus the H+ concentration does not change , and also the pH does not change as we see.
Now at the middle of the buffering region where base concentraion equal to acid concentration, i.e. using Henderson equation
pH = pKa + log (base/acid)
the log term vanishes and pH =pK a From this graph approx it is 3.5- 3.7 (pKa)
pH What is the approximate pK, for the weak acid. 14T (d) Excess hydroxide ion 12-...
What is the approximate pk, for the weak acid. (d) Excess hydroxide ion (c) Equivalence point pH (b) Buffer region ta) Weak acid a) Weak acid 12 14 1 8 10 Volume of NaOH (ml.) Titration curve for the titration of a weak acid with a strong base.
1. The following pictures represent solution at various points in the titration of a weak acid with a strong base. HA + OH - HOH + A OH - -OH Which picture to the left corresponds to cach of the following points in the titration? before the addition of any NaOH at the equivalence point where only a salt remains which solution is a buffer? Multiple Choice 1. Barium hydroxide is slightly soluble in water, with a Kap of 5.00...
5. What is the approximate pH at the equivalence point of a weak acid-strong base titration if 25 mL of an aqueous weak acid requires 29.80 mL of 0.0567 M NaOH? Ka = 3.2 x 10-4 for the weak acid.
What is the approximate pH at the equivalence point of a weak acid-strong base titration if 25 mL of aqueous hydrofluoric acid requires 30.00 mL of 0.200 M NaOH? Ka = 6.76 × 10-4 for HF. A) 5.90 B) 8.10 C) 12.10 D) 1.89 Please explain, thank you!
Using the following pH curve for the titration of a weak acid with a strong base, if the pH at half-equivalence point is 4.75, what is the Ka of the weak acid? Equivalence Point Half-equivalence Point - 8 12 14 Volume of base added (in ml) 20 1.78 x 10-4 1.77 x 10-4 1.77 x 10-5 1.78 x 10-5
Question: In the figure below, titration curves for strong acid
with strong base and weak acid with strong base are shown. Compare
the shapes of these curves early in the titration for three
different cases: titration of a strong acid, titration of a weak
acid with a lower pKa, and titration of a weak acid with a higher
pKa. Discuss with the class why the titration curve for weak acids
increase more rapidly early in the titration than do stronger...
In a titration, 25 mL of 0.10 M weak diprotic acid solution was titrated by 0.10 M sodium hydroxide, NaOH, and produced a titration curve listed below. (20 points total) 14,0 3. 12.0 10.0 8.0 pH 6.0 4.0 2.0 10.0 5.0 20.0 30.0 15.0 25.0 Volume of 0.100 M NaOH, mL The acid used in above titration is a weak diprotic acid. Briefly explain how you know it's diprotic from looking at the titration curve and how you know a...
1. Shown below is the titration curve for the titration of a weak acid with a strong base. What is the approximate value for the pKa of the acid? 14 12 10 0-0-0-0-0-0 00 PH 6 4 0000 2 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 ml NaOH O2 6 8 O 10 O 12 Question 5 (1 point) A solution containing 0.535 grams of an unknown acid was titrated...
1oo ml. to the pA, iation curve for a weak acid being titrated with a strong base is pll equal to the pk, of base is The r-axis scale goes from 0.0 ml to 20.0 ml. The sharp rise is at the acid? The r-axis 24, At what point in the following titratí 20 a. 0.0 mL b.5.0 mL c. 9.0 ml d. 10.0 mL e. 18.0 ml 25. Acid-base indicators change color a. exactly when pH-pK, of the always...
Part 2 (1 point) See Hint Use the titration curve for the weak acid to calculate the pH of a 0.150 M solution of that weak acid. Round the pk, to the nearest whole number for the calculation, and enter your answer for the pH to two significant figures. 7 Question (2 points) Given the titration curves below, answer the following questions. рн ONA OÑA Volume of strong base (mL) 1st attempt Part 1 (1 point) See Periodic Ta Match...