both concentration increase in B. reaction is endothermic.
there are more H3O+ ions, hence lower pH
umm... but doesn't OH- increase at the same time....? sry but i am confuzed :s
Your confusion is probably related to the definition of pH.
The reaction is endothermic, so [H3O+] and [OH-] will increase at the same time, as the forward reaction is favoured by the increase in temperature.
However, pH technically isn't a measure of how acidic the mixture will be. At 25 degrees, a pH of 7 is neutral, at other temperatures a pH of 7 may not be neutral. Fundamentally, pH is a logarithmic measure of the concentration of H3O+ in the mixture. So in this solution at the higher temperature, the concentration of hydronium ions still = the concentration of hydroxide ions. But these concentrations are higher than before. And since pH is measured simply by -log([H3O+]) the pH has decreased. In other words, the concentration of hydroxide ions has no influence on the pH. The pH will be decreased, i.e. it will be below 7. But that this particular temperature this new pH will represent the neutral pH as the solution will still be neutral. If you were to decrease the temperature, the pH would be above 7 despite [OH-] also decreasing, simply because [H3O+] has decreased.