1 / 13

Chapter 11 Electrolyte Effects: Activity or Concentration?

9A. Chapter 11 Electrolyte Effects: Activity or Concentration? Fig 9-1 why K a , K w , Ksp↑while adding [NaCl]↑. Effect of electrolyte concentration on concentration-based equilibrium constants. 9A-1 [explain]. dissociation ↑by↑ionic strength of soln. 9A-2

sibyl
Download Presentation

Chapter 11 Electrolyte Effects: Activity or Concentration?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 9A Chapter 11 Electrolyte Effects: Activity or Concentration? Fig 9-1 why Ka, Kw, Ksp↑while adding [NaCl]↑ Effect of electrolyte concentration on concentration-based equilibrium constants

  2. 9A-1 [explain] dissociation ↑by↑ionic strength of soln.

  3. 9A-2 The effect of added electrolyte p.206 ionic strength = μ= ½ΣCιZι2 [I] ionic charges ex. 9-1, 9-2

  4. Effect of charge on μ

  5. [C]c[D]d [A]a[B]b • 9B Activity Coefficients • aA + bB → cC + dD • Without considering μ, k = • (2) The effect of μ; the [x] activities (ax) ax = γx[x] conc. of x activity of x activity coefficient of x ∴ k = =

  6. ex. XmYn(s) mXn+ + nYm- Ksp = aXmaYn = γXmγYn[X]m[Y]n = γXmγYnK'sp thermodynamic equilibrium const. concentration solubility product const.

  7. 9B-1 properties of γx at p 208. • at μ→ 0, γx → 1, ax → [x] & Ksp → K'sp • at high μ(μ> 0.1 M), γ↑& could > 1 • (2) γxdepend on the of soln • not the nature of the X (electrolyte) • (3) at μ= const. For X with larger charge, the bigger △γx • ex. △γBaSO4 > △γAgCl at μ = k

  8. (4) at any μ, for same charge ions: γX ≈ γY their difference (minor) could be from at any effective diameter of hydrated ion was formed (5) HCN + H2O  H3+ + CN- Ag+ + CN- AgCN  Ni2+ + 4CN-  Ni(CN)42- aCN= aCN = aCN

  9. 9B-2 The Debye – Hückel eqn. • Fine γX of the ions from Z (ionic charge) & αX (average size) -log γX = αX = effective diameter of the hydrated ion X (10-9m)

  10.  for most single charged ions : αX ≈ 0.3 nm -log γX ≈  the larger charged ions ; the larger αX (table 9.1)  For μ< 0.01  3.3 αX << 1  1 + 3.3 αX ≈ 1 ∴ -log γX = 0.51 ZX2 see ex. 9-3

  11. Ex: • What weight of Na2HPO4 and KH2PO4 would be required to prepare 200 mL of a buffer solution of pH 7.40 that has an ionic strength of 0.20?

  12. Sol: • pH = pKa2 + log [HPO4-2]/[ H2PO4-] 7.40 = 7.20 + log X/Y (2) µ = 1/2ΣCiZi2 0.20 = 1/2 {[Na+](1)2 + [X](2)2 + [K+](1)2 + [Y](1)2} = 3X + Y • 解聯立方程式(1) and (2)

More Related