Ask Question
20 February, 19:59

What mass of NaC6H5COO should be added to 1.5 L of 0.40 M C6H5COOH solution at 25 °C to produce a solution with a pH of 3.87 given that the Ka of C6H5COOH is 6.5*10-5 and the molar mass of NaC6H5COO is 144.1032 g/mol?

+2
Answers (1)
  1. 20 February, 20:21
    0
    41 g

    Explanation:

    We have a buffer formed by a weak acid (C₆H₅COOH) and its conjugate base (C₆H₅COO⁻ coming from NaC₆H₅COO). We can find the concentration of C₆H₅COO⁻ (and therefore of NaC₆H₅COO) using the Henderson-Hasselbach equation.

    pH = pKa + log [C₆H₅COO⁻]/[C₆H₅COOH]

    pH - pKa = log [C₆H₅COO⁻] - log [C₆H₅COOH]

    log [C₆H₅COO⁻] = pH - pKa + log [C₆H₅COOH]

    log [C₆H₅COO⁻] = 3.87 - (-log 6.5 * 10⁻⁵) + log 0.40

    [C₆H₅COO⁻] = [NaC₆H₅COO] = 0.19 M

    We can find the mass of NaC₆H₅COO using the following expression.

    M = mass NaC₆H₅COO / molar mass NaC₆H₅COO * liters of solution

    mass NaC₆H₅COO = M * molar mass NaC₆H₅COO * liters of solution

    mass NaC₆H₅COO = 0.19 mol/L * 144.1032 g/mol * 1.5 L

    mass NaC₆H₅COO = 41 g
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “What mass of NaC6H5COO should be added to 1.5 L of 0.40 M C6H5COOH solution at 25 °C to produce a solution with a pH of 3.87 given that the ...” in 📘 Chemistry if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers