What is the molarity of HCl found in a titration where 30 ml of HCl is titrated with 15 ml of .1M NaOH?

2 Answers

#NaOH(aq) + HCl(aq) -> NaCl(aq) + H_2O(l)#

The Molarity of HCl is #.05M#

Explanation:

Since in the balanced equation, NaOH and HCl have a #1:1# ratio they must have the same number of mole

We can say that mols is equal to #(Molarity)/(Liters)# since the units cancel out to equal moles #((mol)/(L))/(L)# or #(mol * L)/L# or #mol#
Finally, we can set up a ratio to solve for the molarity of HCl

#(.1_"M")/(15_"ml") = (x_"M")/(30_"ml")#

This comes out to #x=.05_"M"# or #HCl=.05_"M"#

Jun 5, 2018

I get #"0.05 M"#, which is a reasonable answer.


Write the chemical reaction. This neutralization is of a strong base and strong acid, and is a double-replacement reaction:

#"NaOH"(aq) + "HCl"(aq) -> "H"_2"O"(l) + "NaCl"(aq)#

This is #1:1#, i.e. #"1 mol OH"^(-)# reacted with #"1 mol H"^(+)#. Therefore, what we are looking for is for equal mols of #"HCl"# to react with #"NaOH"#.

#"0.1 mol NaOH"/cancel"L" xx 15 "m"cancel"L" = "1.5 mmols NaOH"#

#= "1.5 mmols OH"^(-)#

This reacts exactly with #"1.5 mmols H"^(+)#, or #"1.5 mmols HCl"#.

If this is contained in #"30 mL"# of aqueous #"HCl"# solution, then the molar concentration is:

#color(blue)(["HCl"]) = (1.5 cancel"m""mols HCl")/(30 cancel"m""L solution") = color(blue)("0.05 M HCl")#