The concentration of #"OH"^-# ions in a solution left after mixing #100ml# of #0.1M# #"MgCl"_2# and #100ml# of #0.2M# #"NaOH"# (#K_(sp)" of Mg"("OH")_2=1.2*10^-12#)?
3 Answers
Explanation:
If magnesium hydroxide is allowed to come into equilibrium with its ions we get :
These are equilibrium concentrations.
We now work out the concentrations of the ions we are mixing to give the reaction quotient Q.
The reaction quotient Q is given by:
These are initial concentrations.
As you can see this greatly exceeds the value of
If
Since
Thus, if this is allowed to reach equilibrium with its ions we can say that if
This is the concentration of the
The concentration of
Here is a separate approach to this that does it the long way.
I also get
This means
(Perhaps if
#["Mg"^(2+)]_i = "0.1 mol"/"L" xx ("0.100 L")/("0.200 L") = "0.05 M"#
#["OH"^(-)]_i = "0.2 mol"/"L" xx "0.100L"/"0.200 L" = "0.1 M"#
With these concentrations, the extent of reaction can be determined:
#Q_(sp) = ["Mg"^(2+)]_i["OH"^(-)]_i^2#
#= ("0.05 M")("0.1 M")^2#
#= 5.0 xx 10^(-4)# #">>"# #K_(sp) = 1.2 xx 10^(-12)#
Since
We then treat these concentrations as the initial concentrations in the shift.
#"Mg"("OH")_2(s) rightleftharpoons "Mg"^(2+)(aq) + 2"OH"^(-)(aq)#
#"I"" "-" "" "" "" "" "0.05" "" "" "" "0.1#
#"C"" "-" "" "" "" "-s" "" "" "" "-2s#
#"E"" "-" "" "" "" "0.05-s" "" "" "0.1-2s#
#K_(sp) = 1.2 xx 10^(-12) = (0.05 - s)(0.1 - 2s)^2#
Since
However, we could predict that since a saturated solution will form (as the solution would have been overly saturated at this temperature),
Let's see if that's true. The resultant cubic is:
#4s^3 - 0.6s^2 + 0.03s - 0.0005 = 0#
An exact graphical solution (Wolfram Alpha, calculator, etc) would give
#color(blue)(["OH"^(-)]_(eq)) = "0.1 M" - 2("0.0499331 M")#
#= color(blue)(1.3_4 xx 10^(-4) "M")#
And indeed, we would get the same thing if solving a
#K_(sp) = (s)(2s)^2 = 4s^3#
#=> 2s = ["OH"^(-)]_(eq)#
#= 2(K_(sp)/4)^(1//3) = 1.3_4 xx 10^(-4)# #color(blue)sqrt""#
Explanation:
Our first task is to calculate the stoichiometry of the reaction:
We have stoichiometric amounts, so we end up with a saturated solution of magnesium hydroxide.