132k views
2 votes
Calculate the molar solubility of CaCO3 in 0.250M Na2CO3

Kps CaCO3 is 4.96x10-9

User TeteArg
by
4.0k points

2 Answers

6 votes

Answer:


1.984x10^(-8)M

Step-by-step explanation:

Hello,

In this case, the equilibrium reaction for the solubility of calcium carbonate is:


CaCO_3(s) \rightleftharpoons Ca^(2+)(aq)+CO_3^(-2)(aq)

In such a way, since 0.250 M sodium carbonate solution is the solvent, we assume an initial concentration of carbonate anion to be also 0.250 M since sodium carbonate is completely dissolved, for that reason the equilibrium equation turns out:


Ksp=[Ca^(2+)][CO_3^(2-)]\\\\4.96x10^(-9)=x*(0.250+x)

Hence, solving for
x we have:


x=1.984x10^(-8)M

Which corresponds to the molar solubility if calcium carbonate as well.

Regards.

User Sayak Banerjee
by
4.6k points
3 votes

Answer:

solubility is 1.984x10⁻⁹M

Step-by-step explanation:

When CaCO₃ is in water, the equilibrium that occurs is:

CaCO₃(s) ⇄ Ca²⁺(aq) + CO₃²⁻(aq)

Kps = [Ca²⁺] [CO₃²⁻] = 4.96x10⁻⁹

If you have a 0.250M solution of Na₂CO₃, [CO₃²⁻] = 0.250M:

[Ca²⁺] [0.250M] = 4.96x10⁻⁹

Assuming you are adding an amount of CaCO₃:

[X] [0.250 + X] = 4.96x10⁻⁹

Where X is the amoun of CaCO₃ you can add, that means, solubility

X² + 0.250X - 4.96x10⁻⁹ = 0

Solving for X:

X = -0.25M → False answer, there is no negative concentrations.

X = 1.984x10⁻⁹M.

That means, solubility is 1.984x10⁻⁹M

User Igorock
by
4.9k points