This MCQ module is based on: Ionic Equilibrium
Ionic Equilibrium
This assessment will be based on: Ionic Equilibrium
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Ionic Equilibria, pH, Buffer and Solubility Product
6.13 Ionic Equilibrium in Solution
Many salts, acids and bases ionise in water. The equilibrium between the un-ionised molecules (or solid) and ions in solution is called ionic equilibrium. Strong electrolytes (NaCl, HCl, NaOH) dissociate ~100%; weak electrolytes (CH₃COOH, NH₃) dissociate only partially.
6.14 Acids and Bases — Three Theories
| Theory | Acid | Base | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arrhenius (1887) | Releases H⁺ in water | Releases OH⁻ in water | HCl, NaOH |
| Brønsted–Lowry (1923) | Proton (H⁺) donor | Proton (H⁺) acceptor | NH₃ + H₂O ⇌ NH₄⁺ + OH⁻ |
| Lewis (1923) | Electron-pair acceptor | Electron-pair donor | BF₃ + NH₃ → F₃B–NH₃ |
6.14.1 Conjugate Acid–Base Pairs (Brønsted)
For HA + B ⇌ A⁻ + BH⁺, the pairs (HA, A⁻) and (B, BH⁺) differ by one proton — they are conjugate pairs. A strong acid has a weak conjugate base and vice versa.
6.15 Ionisation of Water — Kw
Water itself dissociates slightly:
\[2\text{H}_2\text{O(l)} \rightleftharpoons \text{H}_3\text{O}^+(aq) + \text{OH}^-(aq)\] \[K_w = [\text{H}_3\text{O}^+][\text{OH}^-] = 1.0 \times 10^{-14} \text{ at 298 K}\]In pure water, [H₃O⁺] = [OH⁻] = √Kw = 10⁻⁷ M.
6.16 The pH Scale
Acidic: pH < 7 | Neutral: pH = 7 | Basic: pH > 7.
6.17 Strength of Acids — Ka and Kb
For a weak acid HA: HA ⇌ H⁺ + A⁻; Ka = [H⁺][A⁻]/[HA]. pKa = −log Ka.
For a weak base B: B + H₂O ⇌ BH⁺ + OH⁻; Kb = [BH⁺][OH⁻]/[B]; pKb = −log Kb.
| Weak acid | Ka | pKa |
|---|---|---|
| HF | 6.8 × 10⁻⁴ | 3.17 |
| CH₃COOH | 1.8 × 10⁻⁵ | 4.74 |
| HCN | 4.9 × 10⁻¹⁰ | 9.31 |
| NH₄⁺ | 5.6 × 10⁻¹⁰ | 9.25 |
| H₂CO₃ (Ka1) | 4.3 × 10⁻⁷ | 6.37 |
6.17.1 Degree of Ionisation (α) and Ostwald's Dilution Law
For a weak acid HA of concentration c:
\[K_a = \frac{c\alpha^2}{1-\alpha} \quad\overset{\alpha\ll 1}{\approx}\quad c\alpha^2\] \[\Rightarrow \alpha = \sqrt{K_a/c}\]So dilution increases the degree of ionisation but decreases [H⁺].
6.18 Hydrolysis of Salts
| Salt of | Solution pH | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Strong acid + strong base | Neutral (7) | NaCl, KNO₃ |
| Strong acid + weak base | Acidic (< 7) | NH₄Cl, FeCl₃ |
| Weak acid + strong base | Basic (> 7) | CH₃COONa, NaCN |
| Weak acid + weak base | Depends on Ka vs Kb | NH₄CN (basic if Kb > Ka) |
6.19 Buffer Solutions
Acidic buffer: weak acid + its salt (e.g., CH₃COOH + CH₃COONa)
Basic buffer: weak base + its salt (e.g., NH₃ + NH₄Cl)
The Henderson–Hasselbalch equation gives buffer pH:
\[\text{pH} = \text{p}K_a + \log\frac{[\text{salt}]}{[\text{acid}]}\]Maximum buffer capacity: pH = pKa (when [salt] = [acid]).
6.20 Common Ion Effect
Adding a salt with a common ion to a weak acid/base solution suppresses ionisation (Le Chatelier).
Example: Add NH₄Cl to NH₄OH solution → [NH₄⁺] rises → equilibrium shifts left → less OH⁻ → solution less basic.
6.21 Solubility Product (Ksp)
| Salt | Ksp at 25 °C |
|---|---|
| AgCl | 1.8 × 10⁻¹⁰ |
| AgBr | 5.4 × 10⁻¹³ |
| AgI | 8.5 × 10⁻¹⁷ |
| BaSO₄ | 1.1 × 10⁻¹⁰ |
| CaF₂ | 3.4 × 10⁻¹¹ |
| PbCl₂ | 1.7 × 10⁻⁵ |
6.21.1 Ionic Product (Q_sp) and Precipitation
| Comparison | Result |
|---|---|
| Q_sp < K_sp | Unsaturated; more solute can dissolve |
| Q_sp = K_sp | Saturated; equilibrium |
| Q_sp > K_sp | Supersaturated; precipitate forms |
🎯 Interactive: Buffer pH Designer (Henderson–Hasselbalch)
Pick a weak acid and a salt:acid ratio. The simulator gives the buffer pH.
pH = pKa + log([salt]/[acid]) = 4.74
Equimolar mixture: maximum buffer capacity at pH = pKa.
Setup: Take three test tubes, each with 5 mL of saturated NH₃ solution and 2 drops of phenolphthalein (pink). Add: (a) nothing, (b) a few drops of NH₄Cl solution, (c) a few drops of dilute HCl.
(a) Pink stays — NH₃ + H₂O ⇌ NH₄⁺ + OH⁻ unchanged.
(b) Pink fades — adding NH₄⁺ shifts equilibrium LEFT (common-ion effect), [OH⁻] drops, less basic.
(c) Pink disappears completely — HCl removes OH⁻ outright by neutralisation.
Lesson: The common-ion effect is just Le Chatelier's principle applied to ionic equilibrium.
Worked Example 6.8: pH of a Weak Acid
Calculate the pH and degree of ionisation of 0.10 M CH₃COOH; Ka = 1.8 × 10⁻⁵.
[H⁺] = cα = 0.10 × 0.0134 = 1.34 × 10⁻³ M.
pH = −log(1.34 × 10⁻³) = 2.87.
Worked Example 6.9: Buffer pH
A buffer is made of 0.20 M CH₃COOH and 0.30 M CH₃COONa. Find pH. (pKa = 4.74)
Worked Example 6.10: Solubility from Ksp
Calculate the molar solubility of AgCl in pure water; Ksp = 1.8 × 10⁻¹⁰.
Ksp = s² → s = √(1.8 × 10⁻¹⁰) = 1.34 × 10⁻⁵ M.
That is ~1.9 mg of AgCl per litre — almost insoluble.
🎯 Competency-Based Questions
Q1. According to Brønsted–Lowry, an acid is a: L1 Remember
Q2. The pH of pure water at 50 °C (where Kw = 5.5 × 10⁻¹⁴) is: L3 Apply
Q3. Why is NH₄Cl solution acidic? L2 Understand
Q4. Calculate the pH of 0.05 M NaOH. L3 Apply
Q5. HOT (Analyse): 0.10 mol HCl is added to 1 L of buffer (0.10 M CH₃COOH + 0.10 M CH₃COONa). Find the new pH (pKa = 4.74). L4 Analyse
HCl converts acetate (CH₃COO⁻) to acetic acid: 0.10 mol salt becomes 0 mol salt and acid becomes 0.20 mol.
Wait — only 0.10 mol HCl is added but only 0.10 mol salt available — all consumed.
After: [acid] = 0.20 M, [salt] = 0 → no longer a buffer; this is just a weak acid solution. Better: add LESS HCl.
Practical demo: add only 0.02 mol HCl to the buffer. Then [acid] = 0.12 M, [salt] = 0.08 M → pH = 4.74 + log(0.08/0.12) = 4.74 − 0.18 = 4.56 (small change!). Compare with 0.02 mol HCl in pure water → pH would be ~1.7. Buffer drastically reduces pH change.
🧠 Assertion–Reason Questions
Choose: (A) Both true, R explains A. (B) Both true, R doesn't explain A. (C) A true, R false. (D) A false, R true.
A: A buffer solution resists drastic changes in pH on addition of small amounts of acid or base.
R: A buffer contains comparable amounts of a weak acid and its conjugate base.
A: AgCl is more soluble in pure water than in 0.1 M NaCl.
R: Common ion (Cl⁻) suppresses dissolution of AgCl.
A: The pH of a salt of a strong acid and strong base is 7.
R: Such salts undergo extensive hydrolysis.