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Calculate the molarity of the acid solution.
H2SO4(aq) with a pH of 2.

User Weedoze
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1 Answer

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Concentration "molarity" of H₂SO₄ in this solution:

5 × 10⁻³ mol / dm³.

Step-by-step explanation

What's the concentration of H⁺ ions in this solution?


[\text{H}^(+)] = 10^{-\text{pH}},

where
[\text{H}^(+)] is in the unit mol / dm³.


\text{pH} = 2


[\text{H}^(+)] = 10^(-2) \;\text{mol}\cdot\text{dm}^(-3).

What's the concentration "molarity" of H₂SO₄ in this solution?

Sulfuric acid H₂SO₄ is a strong acid. Note the subscript "2". Each mole of this acid dissolves in water to produce two moles of H⁺ ions. It takes only
(10^(-2))/(2) = 5 * 10^(-3)\;\text{mol}\cdot\text{dm}^(-3) of H₂SO₄ to produce twice as much H⁺ ions.

As a result, the molarity of H₂SO₄ is 5 × 10⁻³ mol / dm³ or 0.005 M.

User Jack Koenig
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