Question #445db
1 Answer
Here's what I got.
Explanation:
The trick here is to realize the sodium fluoride,
In order for a salt to be neutral, the cations and anions that result from its dissociation must have a minimum tendency to react with the water molecules present in the solution.
Sodium fluoride does not fall in this category because the fluoride anion,
So, sodium fluoride dissociates completely in aqueous solution
#"NaF"_ ((aq)) -> "Na"_ ((aq))^(+) + "F"_ ((aq))^(-)#
Since this is not the end of the story, you cannot say that solution
Once dissociated, the fluoride anions will react with water
#"F"_ ((aq))^(-) + "H"_ 2"O"_ ((l)) rightleftharpoons "HF"_ ((aq)) + "OH"_ ((aq))^(-)#
So, a sodium fluoride solution will contain
- sodium cations,
#"Na"^(+)# - fluoride anions
- hydroxide anions
- hydrofluoric acid molecules
As you can see, solution
Solution
Now, notice that the solution contains hydroxide anions produced by the hydrolysis of the fluoride anions. This tells you that the pH of the solution will be higher than
That happens because a basic solution contains more hydroxide anions than hydronium cations,