Calculate the pH of a 1.0 M solution of sodium acetate (CH3CO2Na) considering that the Ka of acetic acid (CH3CO2H is 1.7 x 10-5.
CH3CO2Na is a salt of a strong base NaOH and a weak acid CH3CO2H therefore, the solution will be basic.
Dissociate the salt and write the reaction of its weak component with water.
CH3CO2Na → Na+ + CH3CO2–
CH3CO2–(aq) + H2O(l) → CH3CO2H(aq) + OH–(aq) (basic)
Next, determine the Kb from the Ka:
Ka · Kb = Kw = 10-14
Rearranging this, we get an expression for Ka:
\[{K_{{\rm{b}}}}\; = \,\frac{{{K_{\rm{w}}}}}{{{K_{\rm{a}}}}}\; = \;\frac{{{\rm{1}}{{\rm{0}}^{{\rm{ – 14}}}}}}{{{\rm{1}}{\rm{.7}}\; \times \;{\rm{1}}{{\rm{0}}^{{\rm{ – 5}}}}}}\; = \;{\rm{5}}{\rm{.9 }} \times {\rm{ 1}}{{\rm{0}}^{{\rm{ – 10}}}}\]
Set up an ICE table for Kb assigning x mol/l for the ionization.
CH3CO2–(aq) + H2O(l) → CH3CO2H(aq) + OH–(aq)
|
[CH3CO2–] |
[CH3CO2H] |
[OH–] |
Initial |
1.0 |
0 |
0 |
Change |
-x |
+x |
+x |
Equil |
1.0 – x |
x |
x |
Write the expression for Kb using the equilibrium concentrations in the ICE table in order to determine [OH–].
\[{K_{{\rm{b}}}}\; = \,\frac{{{\rm{[C}}{{\rm{H}}_{\rm{3}}}{\rm{C}}{{\rm{O}}_{\rm{2}}}{\rm{H][O}}{{\rm{H}}^{\rm{ – }}}{\rm{]}}}}{{{\rm{[C}}{{\rm{H}}_{\rm{3}}}{\rm{C}}{{\rm{O}}_{\rm{2}}}^{\rm{ – }}{\rm{]}}}}\;{\rm{ = }}\;\frac{{{{\rm{x}}^{\rm{2}}}}}{{{\rm{1}}{\rm{.0}}\;{\rm{ – }}\;{\rm{x}}}}\; \approx \;\frac{{{{\rm{x}}^{\rm{2}}}}}{{{\rm{1}}{\rm{.0}}}}{\rm{ = }}\;{\rm{5}}{\rm{.9}}\;{\rm{ \times }}\,{\rm{1}}{{\rm{0}}^{{\rm{ – 10}}}}\]
We find that x = 2.4 x 10-5 mol/l.
Check if the approximation was valid:
\[\% \, = \;\frac{{2.4\, \times \;{{10}^{ – 5}}}}{{1.0}}\; \times \;100\% \; = \;0.0024\% \]
The approximation is valid, so the concentration of OH– ions at equilibrium is 3.0 x 10-6 M.
We can now calculate the pOH, and then pH using the pH + pH = 14 relationship:
pOH = -log 2.4 x 10-5 = 4.6, and therefore, the pH is:
pH = 14 – pOH = 14 – 4.6 = 9.4
And this answer is also reasonable because we predicted to have a basic solution.
Check Also
- Definitions of Acids and Bases
- Acid-Base Reactions
- Acid-Base Titrations
- Conjugate Acid and Conjugate Base
- Autoionization of Water and Kw
- The pH and Acidity
- Acid Strength, Ka, and pKa
- Base Strength, Kb, and pKb
- Ka, pKa, Kb, and pKb Relationship
- The pH of a Strong Acid and Base
- pH + pOH = 14
- The pH of a Weak Acid
- The pH of a Weak Base
- The pH of Polyprotic Acids
- The acidity of a Salt Solution
- The pH of a Salt Solution
- The pH of Salts With Acidic Cations and Basic Anions
- pH Practice Problems
- Acids and Bases Practice Problems
Acids and Bases Quiz