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Determining Ph (1 Viewer)

Jaserius

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Hey guys,

can you determine the ph of a solution if an an acid is dissolved in it, e.g. carbonic acid, but you dont know the volume or concentration of the solution or the amount dissolved?
 

Dreamerish*~

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you would titrate it against a base of known concentration, work out the concentration, and then the pH.
 

thunderdax

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There is a way to do it mathematically. I think it was in the course a while ago, but its been chucked from the syllabus since then
 

xiao1985

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@dreamish: but u then need to know the percentage ionisation of the acid...

i would say jsut use and pH meter...
 

Dreamerish*~

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xiao1985 said:
@dreamish: but u then need to know the percentage ionisation of the acid...

i would say jsut use and pH meter...
can you be my online chem tutor? :)
i want as many as possible :)
 

xiao1985

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jamesy_1988 said:
it would be very hard to work it out mathematically cos of all the variables
in fact, i change my mind...
if u do not know concentration/moles added/volume added, without pH determining processes (ie pH probe, indicator etc) it is impossible to determine the pH

other wise, u may use formula to work out...

@dreamish~ : sure... long as i don't have major exams/asmts coming up... =p
 

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