Where'd you get these two steps from?
Sorry, I missed that reply^
Again, here is what I did
What volume of 0.100 M sulfuric acid would be required to neutralise a solution containing 0.500 g of sodium hydroxide and 0.800 g of potassium hydroxide?- NaOH (aq) --> Na+ (aq) + OH- (aq)
- KOH (aq) --> K+ (aq) + OH- (aq)
- n(NaOH) = n(OH-) = 0.5/40 = .0125 mol
- n(KOH) = n(OH-) = 0.8/56.1 = 0.0142603 mol
- n(OH-)total = 0.0125 + 0.0142603 = 0.027603 mol
- Therefore n(H3O+) required to neutralise is also = 0.027603 mol
- H2SO4 (aq) --> 2H3O+
- n(H2SO4) required to neutralise = 1/2 n(H3O+) = 0.0138015
- V(H2SO4) = n/C = 0.0138015/0.1 = 0.138 Litres
You asked about these two steps:
1. Therefore n(H
3O
+) required to neutralise is also = 0.027603 mol
2. H
2SO
4 (aq) --> 2H
3O
+1: I am assuming that because I have 0.027603 mol of OH
- (the ion that makes the solution basic that I would need the same number of mols of H
3O
+ (the ion that makes it acidic) to neutralise the solution.
2: For every mol of H
2SO
4 placed in water, there are two moles of H
3O
+. This seems necessary when trying to work out how many moles of H
2SO
4 are present if you're working off the assumption (which you are) that the solution was neutralised.
If you can't make sense of this could someone show their own method of finding an answer? Thanks