Just needed a little explanation of concepts. Is the ionisation constant/product of water (Kw) like K in that it tells you the extent the reaction progresses? So... this reaction:
H20(l) + H2O(l) <---> H3O+(aq) + OH-(aq) ionises very little? (Kw= 1.0*10^-14 at 25C)
When you get water like above and you increase and decrease the temp, the pH decreases and increases, but the solution basically stays neutral still doesn't it? 'Cause when you get net forward/reverse reactions because of the increases and decreases in temp, the H3O+ and OH- concentration both decrease and increase by the same amounts?
Just need clarification, that's all.
Also, don't exactly understand what the units of Kw refer to: 1.0* 10^-14 mol^2 dm^-6... =S And sometimes, it's written as mol dm^-3 ... is there a difference? :wave:
H20(l) + H2O(l) <---> H3O+(aq) + OH-(aq) ionises very little? (Kw= 1.0*10^-14 at 25C)
When you get water like above and you increase and decrease the temp, the pH decreases and increases, but the solution basically stays neutral still doesn't it? 'Cause when you get net forward/reverse reactions because of the increases and decreases in temp, the H3O+ and OH- concentration both decrease and increase by the same amounts?
Just need clarification, that's all.
Also, don't exactly understand what the units of Kw refer to: 1.0* 10^-14 mol^2 dm^-6... =S And sometimes, it's written as mol dm^-3 ... is there a difference? :wave:
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