I am having trouble with several questions:
1. Solutions of the acid-base indicator methyl red contains an equilibrium mixture of the red-coloured acid form of the indicator and a yellow-coloured conjugate form of the indicator and a yellow-coloured conjugate base form. The equilibrium can be represented by:
HMr(aq) <---> H+(aq) + Mr-(aq)
red yellow
The equilibrium constant for the reaction is 10^-5M at 25C.
a. Calculate the value of the ratio [Mr-]/[HMr] when the indicator is dissolved in a solution of pH 2. (The answer to this is 10^ -3, but I don't understand how it was calculated...)
b. Predict the colour of the indicator in this solution... (I don't understand how to find the answer...)
2. A buffer made from sodium hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO3) and carbonic acid (H2CO3) is sometimes used in swimming pools. Using this buffer as an example, explain how buffers operate.
3. The following equilibia are involved in the transport of carbon dioxide throughout the body:
CO2(g) <---> CO2(aq)
CO2(aq) + H2O(l) <---> H2CO3(aq) <---> H+(aq) + HCO3-(aq)
Buffers in the blood prevent these reactions from causing large changes in pH.
a. Use Le Chatelier's Principle to explain what would other wise happen to the pH in i) the lungs, and ii) the tissues
b. Hyperventilation results from rapid breathing.
i) When might a person experience hyperventilation?
ii) Use the above equations to explain what effect hyperventilation has on blood pH.
iii) During cardiac arrest the heart stops beating, but other cellular functions continue. Doctors sometimes quickly inject a sodium hydrogen carbonate solution directly into the heart muslce before restarting the heart. Why?
4. In pure water at 25C, the concetnration of both H30+ and OH- ions is 10^-7 due to the reaction described by the equation:
2H20(l) <---> H30+(aq) + OH-(aq)
The forward reaction is endothermic. Suppose some pure water is heated. What happens to the pH and why?
5. A 0.100M solution of hypiodous acid (HOI) has a pH of 5.8
The ionisation equation: HOI(aq) + H20(l) <----> OI- (aq) + H3O+(aq)
and K= [H3O+][OI-]/ [HOI]
But it says: 'Calculate [H3O+] in the solution'... how do we do that?
Thanks in advance ^^
:wave:
1. Solutions of the acid-base indicator methyl red contains an equilibrium mixture of the red-coloured acid form of the indicator and a yellow-coloured conjugate form of the indicator and a yellow-coloured conjugate base form. The equilibrium can be represented by:
HMr(aq) <---> H+(aq) + Mr-(aq)
red yellow
The equilibrium constant for the reaction is 10^-5M at 25C.
a. Calculate the value of the ratio [Mr-]/[HMr] when the indicator is dissolved in a solution of pH 2. (The answer to this is 10^ -3, but I don't understand how it was calculated...)
b. Predict the colour of the indicator in this solution... (I don't understand how to find the answer...)
2. A buffer made from sodium hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO3) and carbonic acid (H2CO3) is sometimes used in swimming pools. Using this buffer as an example, explain how buffers operate.
3. The following equilibia are involved in the transport of carbon dioxide throughout the body:
CO2(g) <---> CO2(aq)
CO2(aq) + H2O(l) <---> H2CO3(aq) <---> H+(aq) + HCO3-(aq)
Buffers in the blood prevent these reactions from causing large changes in pH.
a. Use Le Chatelier's Principle to explain what would other wise happen to the pH in i) the lungs, and ii) the tissues
b. Hyperventilation results from rapid breathing.
i) When might a person experience hyperventilation?
ii) Use the above equations to explain what effect hyperventilation has on blood pH.
iii) During cardiac arrest the heart stops beating, but other cellular functions continue. Doctors sometimes quickly inject a sodium hydrogen carbonate solution directly into the heart muslce before restarting the heart. Why?
4. In pure water at 25C, the concetnration of both H30+ and OH- ions is 10^-7 due to the reaction described by the equation:
2H20(l) <---> H30+(aq) + OH-(aq)
The forward reaction is endothermic. Suppose some pure water is heated. What happens to the pH and why?
5. A 0.100M solution of hypiodous acid (HOI) has a pH of 5.8
The ionisation equation: HOI(aq) + H20(l) <----> OI- (aq) + H3O+(aq)
and K= [H3O+][OI-]/ [HOI]
But it says: 'Calculate [H3O+] in the solution'... how do we do that?
Thanks in advance ^^
:wave: