Given K_a = 5.90 xx 10^(-2) for "0.530 M" lactic acid, what is the ["H"^+] at equilibrium?

1 Answer
Mar 4, 2017

Now, this is actually something that requires the full ICE table. The K_(a1) is not small enough to use the small x approximation, so...

"H"_2"A"(aq) + "H"_2"O"(l) rightleftharpoons "HA"^(-) + "H"_3"O"^(+)(aq)

"I"" ""0.530 M"" "" "" "" "" ""0.00 M"" ""0.00 M"
"C"" ""-x M"" "" "" "" "" "" ""+x M"" ""+x M"
"E"" ""0.530-x M"" "" "" "" ""x M"" "" ""x M"

You still have to go through with the quadratic equation.

K_(a1) = 5.90 xx 10^(-2) = (["HA"^(-)]_(eq)["H"_3"O"^(+)]_(eq))/(["H"_2"A"]_(eq))

= x^2/(["H"_2"A"] - x)

Solving for the correct equation form, we obtain a general quadratic equation for one-proton dissociations:

x^2 + K_(a1)x - K_(a1)["H"_2"A"] = 0

You can see that had we assumed x was small, this still reduces to the correct expression for x:

x^2 + cancel(K_(a1)x)^("small???") - K_(a1)["H"_2"A"] = 0

=> color(red)(x) ~~ sqrt(K_(a1)["H"_2"A"]) ~~ color(red)"0.177 M" => 33.4% dissociation
(upon rejecting the nonphysical x)

This is a great example of how NOT to use the small x approximation, because it gives too large of an error (the "pH" would have been 0.752 under this failed approximation). This acid dissociates to one third of its original concentration...

In full then, the true answer is:

x = (-K_(a1) pm sqrt(K_(a1)^2 - 4(1)(-K_(a1)["H"_2"A"])))/(2(1))

You could plug stuff in right now... but here's an easier formula to use on many weak-acid one-proton dissociation equilibria:

bbx = (-K_(a1) pm sqrt(K_(a1)^2 + 4K_(a1)["H"_2"A"]))/(2)

= (-K_(a1) pm 2sqrt((K_(a1)/2)^2 + K_(a1)["H"_2"A"]))/(2)

= bb(-K_(a1)/2 pm sqrt((K_(a1)/2)^2 + K_(a1)["H"_2"A"]))

So, your true x is, upon rejecting the nonphysical x:

color(blue)(x = ["H"^(+)] = "0.150 M")