Ethanoic acid (CH₃COOH) is a weak acid in water - VCE - SSCE Chemistry - Question 7 - 2005 - Paper 1
Question 7
Ethanoic acid (CH₃COOH) is a weak acid in water.
a. Write an equation showing the ionisation of ethanoic acid in water.
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Worked Solution & Example Answer:Ethanoic acid (CH₃COOH) is a weak acid in water - VCE - SSCE Chemistry - Question 7 - 2005 - Paper 1
Step 1
Write an equation showing the ionisation of ethanoic acid in water.
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Answer
The ionisation of ethanoic acid in water can be represented by the following equilibrium reaction:
CH3COOH(aq)⇌CH3COO−(aq)+H+(aq)
Step 2
Calculate the hydrogen ion concentration in a 0.100 M solution of ethanoic acid.
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Answer
To calculate the hydrogen ion concentration, we can use the formula relating pH to hydrogen ion concentration:
[H+]=10−pH
Substituting the given pH:
[H+]=10−2.88≈1.32×10−3 M
Step 3
Calculate the acidity constant of ethanoic acid at 25°C.
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Answer
The acidity constant (Kₐ) is calculated using the expression:
Comparing two 0.10 M solutions of methanoic and ethanoic acids, which solution would have the higher pH?
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Answer
Since methanoic acid (HCOOH) has a higher acidity constant than ethanoic acid (CH₃COOH), it dissociates more in solution. Therefore, the 0.10 M solution of ethanoic acid will have a higher pH compared to the 0.10 M solution of methanoic acid.
Step 5
Equal volumes of both solutions were titrated against a 0.10 M solution of NaOH. Which of the solutions, if either, would require the greater volume of the NaOH solution for complete neutralisation?
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Answer
The solution of ethanoic acid would require a greater volume of NaOH to neutralise because it has a lower acidity constant, meaning that it produces fewer hydrogen ions compared to the stronger methanoic acid. Thus, more moles of NaOH are needed to neutralise the weaker acid.