Photo AI

Sulfuric acid is a strong dibasic acid - Leaving Cert Chemistry - Question 7 - 2011

Question icon

Question 7

Sulfuric-acid-is-a-strong-dibasic-acid-Leaving Cert Chemistry-Question 7-2011.png

Sulfuric acid is a strong dibasic acid. The formula HA represents a weak monobasic acid. (a) How do strong acids differ from weak acids in their behaviour in water ... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:Sulfuric acid is a strong dibasic acid - Leaving Cert Chemistry - Question 7 - 2011

Step 1

How do strong acids differ from weak acids in their behaviour in water according to (i) the Arrhenius theory?

96%

114 rated

Answer

According to the Arrhenius theory:

  • Strong Acids: Strong acids are characterized by their ability to almost completely dissociate in water to produce hydrogen ions (H⁺) and anions. For example, sulfuric acid (H₂SO₄) dissociates to release H⁺ ions effectively.

  • Weak Acids: Weak acids only partially dissociate in solution, resulting in a lower concentration of H⁺ ions in the solution. An example would be acetic acid (CH₃COOH), which does not completely ionize.

Step 2

How do strong acids differ from weak acids in their behaviour in water according to (ii) the Brønsted-Lowry theory?

99%

104 rated

Answer

According to the Brønsted-Lowry theory:

  • Strong Acids: Strong acids are good proton donors, meaning they readily donate protons (H⁺) to other substances in the solution.

  • Weak Acids: Weak acids less readily donate protons compared to strong acids. They do not fully ionize, thus the equilibrium shifts to the left, favoring the undissociated form of the acid.

Step 3

What is the conjugate base of (i) sulfuric acid?

96%

101 rated

Answer

The conjugate base of sulfuric acid (H₂SO₄) is the hydrogen sulfate ion (HSO₄⁻).

Step 4

What is the conjugate base of (ii) the weak acid HA?

98%

120 rated

Answer

The conjugate base of the weak acid HA is the A⁻ ion.

Step 5

Which of these conjugate bases is the stronger? Explain.

97%

117 rated

Answer

The hydrogen sulfate ion (HSO₄⁻) is the stronger conjugate base compared to A⁻ because:

  • HSO₄⁻ can further dissociate to SO₄²⁻ and release a proton.
  • In contrast, the A⁻ ion, being the conjugate base of a weak acid, has a lesser tendency to accept protons compared to HSO₄⁻.

Step 6

Explain, by drawing a balanced equation for its dissociation in water, that the conjugate base of sulfuric acid is itself an acid.

97%

121 rated

Answer

The dissociation of sulfuric acid in water can be represented as follows:

  1. First dissociation: H2SO4(aq)H+(aq)+HSO4(aq)H_2SO_4 (aq) \rightarrow H^+ (aq) + HSO_4^- (aq)

  2. Second dissociation: HSO4(aq)H+(aq)+SO42(aq)HSO_4^- (aq) \rightleftharpoons H^+ (aq) + SO_4^{2-} (aq)

The conduit relationships show that HSO₄⁻ can also donate a proton, confirming that it behaves as an acid.

Step 7

Define pH.

96%

114 rated

Answer

pH is defined as the negative logarithm to base 10 of the hydrogen ion concentration in a solution:

pH=log10[H+]pH = -\log_{10}[H^+]

It represents the acidity or alkalinity of a solution, with lower pH values indicating higher acidity.

Step 8

Calculate the pH of a 0.2 M solution of a weak acid, HA, the value of whose acid dissociation constant, K_a, is 6.3 × 10⁻⁴ mol l⁻¹.

99%

104 rated

Answer

To find the pH:

  1. Write the expression for K_a: Ka=[H+][A][HA]K_a = \frac{[H^+][A^-]}{[HA]} Assuming xx is the concentration of dissociated acid, Ka=xx0.2xx20.2K_a = \frac{x \cdot x}{0.2 - x} \approx \frac{x^2}{0.2} (since xx is small)

  2. Substitute the known KaK_a value: 6.3×104=x20.26.3 \times 10^{-4} = \frac{x^2}{0.2} x2=6.3×104×0.2=1.26×104x^2 = 6.3 \times 10^{-4} \times 0.2 = 1.26 \times 10^{-4} x=1.26×1041.12×102 Mx = \sqrt{1.26 \times 10^{-4}} \approx 1.12 \times 10^{-2} \text{ M}

  3. Now, calculate the pH: pH=log10(1.12×102)1.95pH = -\log_{10}(1.12 \times 10^{-2}) \approx 1.95

Step 9

What is the concentration of a sulfuric acid solution that has the same pH?

96%

101 rated

Answer

To find the concentration of H⁺ ions in the sulfuric acid solution:

  1. Since sulfuric acid (balanced reaction) first dissociates completely: H2SO42H++SO42H_2SO_4 \rightarrow 2H^+ + SO_4^{2-} For 1 mole of H₂SO₄, it produces 2 moles of H⁺.

  2. Concentration calculation: If the pH is approximately 1.95, then: [H+]=101.950.0112 M[H^+] = 10^{-1.95} \approx 0.0112 \text{ M}

  3. Therefore, The initial concentration of sulfuric acid: CH2SO4=[H+]2=0.011220.0056extMC_{H_2SO_4} = \frac{[H^+]}{2} = \frac{0.0112}{2} \approx 0.0056 ext{ M}

Join the Leaving Cert students using SimpleStudy...

97% of Students

Report Improved Results

98% of Students

Recommend to friends

100,000+

Students Supported

1 Million+

Questions answered

;