How many #"mL"# of #2.15%# (by mass) #"HCl"# would be required to neutralize #"375 mL"# of #"165 mEq/L"# #"Ba(OH)"_2#?
Assume all solutions have a density of #1.12"g"/"mL"# .
#2"HCl (aq)"+"Ba(OH)"_2"(aq)"\to2"H"_2"O (l)"+"BaCl"_2"(aq)"#
Assume all solutions have a density of
1 Answer
This has been answered before with slightly different numbers. It may be time for you to go back and refresh your memory on what we talked about there for practice.
I get that
As before, a milliequivalent is just the number of millimols with respect to
What we do is convert the
BASE CONCENTRATION
As mentioned,
#["OH"^(-)] = (165 cancel"m"cancel"Eq" cancel("Ba"("OH")_2))/"L" xx (1 cancel"thing")/(1000 cancel"milli"cancel"things") xx ("2 mol OH"^(-))/(2 cancel"Eq" cancel("Ba"("OH")_2))#
#= ul("0.165 M OH"^(-))# (NOTE: since there are approximately two
#"OH"^(-)# for every one#"Ba"("OH")_2# , assuming#100%# dissociation,#["OH"^(-)] ~~ 2["Ba"("OH")_2]# , so#["Ba"("OH")_2] ~~ "0.0825 M"# .)
Here we simply treated "milli" as a separate object.
For instance,
ACID CONCENTRATION
Percent by mass, or
#2.15%"w/w HCl" = "2.15 g HCl"/"100 g solution"#
So, use the molar mass of
#["H"^(+)] = ["HCl"]#
and so, treating the numerator and denominator separately:
#["H"^+] = (2.15 cancel"g HCl" xx ("1 mol")/(36.461 cancel"g HCl"))/(100 cancel"g solution" xx cancel"mL"/(1.12 cancel"g") xx "L"/(1000 cancel"mL")#
#= ul("0.660 M H"^(+))#
To evaluate this, just evaluate the top and bottom separately and then you should get
ACID/BASE REACTION
Normally we would need a mol ratio from the chemical reaction, but since everything is now in terms of
We know the
#0.375 cancel"L" xx "0.165 mol"/cancel"L" = "0.0619 mols OH"^(-)#
And we know we want exact reaction, so we want
#color(blue)(V_(HCl)) = "L"/(0.660 cancel("mol H"^(+))) xx 0.0619 cancel("mols H"^(+))#
#= "0.0938 L" = color(blue)("93.8 mL")#