How do you calculate the concentration of H^+ ions in a 0.27 M NaoH solution?

1 Answer
Mar 25, 2018

[H_3O^+]=10^(-13.43)*mol*L^-1=3.70xx10^-14*mol*L^-1

Explanation:

We gots the equilibrium 2H_2O(l)rightleftharpoonsH_3O^+ +HO^-

For which K_w=[H_3O^+][HO^-]=10^(-14) under standard conditions of temperature and pressure...and taking log_10 of BOTH sides...

log_10K_w=log_10(10^-14)=underbrace(log_10[H_3O^+])_(-pH)+underbrace(log_10[HO^-])_(-pOH)

Now logarithms were used in the old days before electronic calculators given that they allow the multiplication of large or small numbers fairly easily..

But by definition of the logarithmic function, log_10(10^-14)=-14...and so our defining relationship...

pH+pOH=14

And we got [HO^-]=0.27*mol*L^-1...

pOH=-log_10(0.27)=-(-0.569)=0.569

And pH=14-pOH=14-0.569=13.43 as required....

And finally, we take antilogarithms...[H_3O^+]=10^(-13.43)=3.70xx10^-14*mol*L^-1