But VCAA gave the volume of both the container (10.00) and used NaOH (9.90) to more than 2 sig figs. Don't we use sig figs since our result cannot be more accurate than our given values? If so, we know accurately the amount of NaOH left - 0.100 to 3 sig figs. Basically what im getting at is all the values given in the question are 3 sig figs or more, we calculate that 0.01 ourselves so i dont really get why we restrict the answer to 2 sig figs
But you
don't know the volume of NaOH left as accurately as 0.100, only as 0.10 because for addition/subtraction you don't carry through minimal sig figs, you carry through minimal
decimal places... as I have said in a reply above.
After all, if I have measured an empty beaker to be 10000.0 g, then I add some compound and the new mass is 10001.2 g, am I going to say the mass of compound added is 1.20000 g? Highly unlikely. Better to say 1.2 g.
Second point to make: I believe each calculation must be done successively in terms of sig figs/decimals - you consider the sig figs of the immediate values you are using and carry that through to determine the sig figs for the answer in that step of the calculation,
not the sig figs of numbers from the very beginning.
Because of the way that addition/subtraction combined with multiplication/division can
change the number of sig figs of an answer from what you began with, I think the sig figs must be carried through step by step in this manner...
...I think.
If you are purely doing multiplication/division throughout a calculation then
this does not matter - you can simply look at the values you started with since for purely multiplication/division in every step, sig figs do
not fluctuate.
So I believe by the subtraction calculation our amount of NaOH is 0.10 to highest precision, and the resulting division in part iii. to calculate the concentration gives an answer limited to 2 sig figs due to this.
This is overall just a means as to justify why VCAA might be right in this situation. Hope this helps.