Question #52526
1 Answer
Here's what I got.
Explanation:
For starters, you should know that ammonium chloride is a soluble ionic compound, which means that it dissociates completely when dissolved in water.
This means that you will have
#"NH"_ 4"Cl"_ ((aq)) -> "NH"_ (4(aq))^(+) + "Cl"_ ((aq))^(-)#
As you can see, the salt dissociates to produce ammonium cations and chloride anions in a
You can thus say that
#["NH"_4^(+)] = "0.20 M" " "# and#" " ["Cl"^(-)] = "0.20 M"#
Now, the ammonium cation will act as a weak acid in water and react to form hydronium cations and ammonia in a
#"NH"_ (4(aq))^(+) + "H"_ 2"O" _ ((l)) rightleftharpoons "NH"_ (3(aq)) + "H"_ 3"O"_ ((aq))^(+)#
Look up the acid dissociation constant for the ammonium cation
#K_a = 5.6 * 10^(-10)#
The
This means that if you take
#["NH"_4^(+)] = "0.20 M" - x#
The concentration of ammonium cations will decrease by
#["H"_3"O"^(+)] = "0 M" + x#
#["NH"_3] = "0 M" + x#
Mind you, you do have some hydronium cations present in water before you dissolve the salt, but their concentration is low enough to allow you to approximate it with
By definition, the acid dissociation constant will be
#K_a = ( ["NH"_3] * ["H"_3"O"^(+)])/(["NH"_4^(+)])#
In your case, the will be equal to
#5.6 * 10^(-10) = (x * x)/(0.20 - x) = x^2/(0.20 - x)#
Because the acid dissociation constant has such a small value compared to the initial concentration of the ammonium cations, you can use the approximation
#0.20 - x ~~ 0.20#
This means that you will have
#5.6 * 10^(-10) = x^2/0.20#
which gets you
#x = sqrt(0.20 * 5.6 * 10^(-10)) = 1.1 * 10^(-5)#
You can thus say that your solution will contain
#["NH"_4^(+)] = 0.20 - 1.1 * 10^(-5) ="0.199989 M"#
#["H"_3"O"^(+)] = 1.1 * 10^(-5)# #"M"#
#["NH"_3] = 1.1 * 10^(-5)# #"M"#
To find the percent dissociation, divide the concentration of the ammonium cations that dissociated to produce ions by the initial concentration of the ammonium cations and multiply the result by
#"% dissociation" = (1.1 * 10^(-5)color(red)(cancel(color(black)("M"))))/(0.20color(red)(cancel(color(black)("M")))) xx 100% = 0.0055%#
With the exception of the equilibrium concentration of ammonium cations, which I'll leave rounded to six sig figs for illustration purposes, all the values are rounded to two sig figs, the number of sig figs you have for the initial concentration of the salt.
As a bonus, you can calculate the concentration of hydroxide anions in this solution. To do that, use the fact that an aqueous solution at room temperature has
#["H"_3"O"^(+)] * ["OH"^(-)] = 10^(-14)# #"M"^2#
This will get you
#["OH"^(-)] = (10^(-14)"M"^color(red)(cancel(color(black)(2))))/(1.1 * 10^(-5)color(red)(cancel(color(black)("M")))) = 9.1 * 10^(-10)# #"M"#