"Which acid must have more than one acidic hydrogen per molecule? Give a reason for your answer"
The solutions are all 0.10M. We can see that the pH's vary, that is some donate their

ion more so than others. For a monoprotic acid, at best they can completely donate a single

ion completely. In this case, we'll have
 = -log_{10}(0.1) = -(-1) = 1)
That's the lowest pH we could get out of a monoprotic acid with 0.10M of acid.
So in this case, if we were to have a pH less than 1, that would mean we'd need a

. To get that we'd need more hydronium ions being donated -- in other words more than one acidic hydrogen per molecule.
Hence, Acid III, as that has a pH of 0.7.
Interestingly, if we solve in general:
 < 1)
 < 1)
} < 10^1)



So when pH is
less than one, then

for any volume. You could deduce that it's Acid III using the same reasoning as before - we only have 0.10M of acid, so a monoprotic acid could at best have a pH equal to 1.