Question #d1319
1 Answer
Explanation:
Methanoic acid is a weak acid, which implies that it will only partially ionize in aqueous solution to produce hydronium cations,
The ionization equilibrium can be written as
#"HCOOH"_ ((aq)) + "H"_ 2"O"_ ((l)) rightleftharpoons "HCOO"_ ((aq))^(-) + "H"_ 3"O"_ ((aq))^(+)#
Now, notice that every mole of methanoic acid that ionizes produces
This means that, at equilibrium, you will have
#["HCOO"^(-)] = ["H"_3"O"^(+)]#
Moreover, you can say that the equilibrium concentration of the methanoic acid will be equal to
#["HCOOH"] = ["HCOOH"]_ 0 - ["H"_ 3"O"^(+)]#
This basically tells you that with every
The acid dissociation constant for the ionization of methanoic acid can be written as
#K_a = (["HCOO"^(-)] * ["H"_3"O"^(+)])/(["HCOOH"])#
Now, you know that the
#"pH" = - log(["H"_3"O"^(+)])#
which implies that
#["H"_3"O"^(+)] = 10^(-"pH")#
At equilibrium, the concentration of the methanoate anions is equal to that of the hydronium cations, so you can say that
#["HCOO"^(-)] = 10^(-"pH")#
The equilibrium concentration of the acid will be equal to--keep in mind that the initial concentration of the acid is
#["HCOOH"] = 0.10 - 10^(-"pH")#
This means that the acid dissociation constant is equal to
#K_a = (10^(-"pH") * 10^(-"pH"))/(0.10 - 10^(-"pH")) = 10^(-2"pH")/(0.10 - 10^(-"pH"))#
Plug in the value you have for the
#K_a = 10^(-2 * 2.4)/(0.10 - 10^(-2.4)) = color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)(1.7 * 10^(-4))))#
I'll leave the answer rounded to two sig figs.