How to calculate the number of H+ and OH- ions in this question?

calculate the number of H+ and OH- ions in 300ml of pure water. on a temperature of 298k

1 Answer
Mar 26, 2017

In pure water at #"298 K"#, the #K_w# of water is #10^(-14)#. Therefore, the equilibrium for the autoionization of water is:

#"H"_2"O"(l) rightleftharpoons "H"^(+)(aq) + "OH"^(-)(aq)#

and its equilibrium constant expression is then:

#K_w = 10^(-14) = ["H"^(+)]["OH"^(-)]#

But the #"H"^(+)# and #"OH"^(-)# are 1:1, so #["H"^(+)] = ["OH"^(-)]#. Therefore,

#sqrt(K_w) = |sqrt(10^(-14))| = |sqrt((10^(-7))^2)| = 10^(-7) "M"#,

and we have the concentrations

#["H"^(+)] = ["OH"^(-)] = 10^(-7) "M"#.

So, we can calculate the mols of either one.

#n_(H^(+)) = ["OH"^(-)] xx "300 mL" xx "1 L"/"1000 mL"#

#= 3 xx 10^(-8) "mols"# #"H"^(+)# or #"OH"^(-)#

Thus, the number of particles of each kind are:

#color(blue)(N_(H^(+)) = N_(OH^(-))) = n_(H^(+))*N_A#

#= 3 xx 10^(-8) "mols" * 6.0221413 xx 10^(23) "particles/mol"#

#=# #color(blue)(1.807 xx 10^(16))# #color(blue)("particles of")# #color(blue)("H"^(+))# #color(blue)("or")# #color(blue)("OH"^(-))#