What is the pH of 3.1 times 10^-3 M HCl?

1 Answer
Apr 3, 2017

There are two ways you can do this. The easy way is to realize that "HCl" is a strong acid, so its dissociation is considered complete, and ["HCl"] = ["H"^(+)].

EASY WAY

Recall:

"pH" = -log["H"^(+)]

From the knowledge that "pH" = -log["H"^(+)] = -log["HCl"], we can say:

color(blue)("pH") = -log(3.1 xx 10^(-3) "M") = 2.50_(8638306)

= color(blue)(2.51)

HARD WAY

The hard way is to look up the K_a of "HCl" and find that it is around 1.3 xx 10^6 and do an ICE Table as if it were an actually not-heavily-skewed equilibrium. I would never advise any chemistry student to do this...

"HCl"(aq) " "" " -> " "" ""H"^(+)(aq) + "Cl"^(-)(aq)

"I"" "3.1 xx 10^(-3)"M"" "" "" "" ""0 M"" "" ""0 M"
"C"" "-x" "" "" "" "" "" "" "+x" "" "+x
"E"" "(3.1 xx 10^(-3) -x)"M"" "" "x" "" "" "x

K_a = 1.3 xx 10^6 = x^2/(3.1 xx 10^(-3) - x)

We could simply make the approximation that 3.1 xx 10^(-3) ~~ x, but we are supposing we don't know that yet. So, let's just solve for the quadratic equation.

x^2 + K_ax - 3.1 xx 10^(-3)K_a = 0

The quadratic formula gives, with a = 1, b = K_a, c = -3.1 xx 10^(-3)K_a:

x = 0.003099999993,

and we reject the root x ~~ -1.3 xx 10^6 since ["HCl"]_(eq) would have become 3.1 xx 10^(-3) - (-1.3 xx 10^6) ~~ 1.3 xx 10^6, which would falsely imply that "HCl" doesn't dissociate at all.

Thus, we get that

K_a = (3.099999993 xx 10^(-3))^2/(3.1 xx 10^(-3) - 3.099999993 xx 10^(-3))

= 1.37 xx 10^6 ~~ 1.3 xx 10^6,

as it was when we started, and

["HCl"]_(eq) = 3.1 xx 10^(-3) - 3.099999993 xx 10^(-3) ~~ 0,

and

["H"^(+)]_(eq) = 3.099999993 xx 10^(-3) "M" ~~ 3.1 xx 10^(-3) "M",

as expected. Finding K_a is still valid, however, since the denominator isn't exactly zero... So, if we really wanted the "exact" answer:

"pH" = -log["H"^(+)] = 2.50_(8638307) ~~ 2.51

as before, only differing past the 8th decimal place (so who cares?).