Chapter 15 Practice
Chapter 15 Practice
2. Define Bronsted-Lowry acids and bases. How do the Bonsted-Lowry definitions differ from Arrhenius
definitions of acids and bases?
4. Classify the following as Bronsted-Lowry acid or base, or both: H2O, OH-, H3O+, NH3, HCN, NH2-, NO3-,
NH4+, H2PO4-, CO32-, and HBr.
7. Write a balanced chemical equation to represent each of the following acid-base neutralization reactions:
a) H3PO4 and KOH b) HNO3 and NaOH c) H2SO4 and Ca(OH)2
8. Calculate the hydronium ion concentration, [H3O+], given the following hydroxide ion concentrations, [OH-].
Indicate whether each of the solutions is acidic, basic, or neutral.
a) 2.5 x 10-3 M b) 1.2 x 10-11 M c) 5.2 x 10-10 M d) 3.7 x 10-4 M
9. Calculate the hydroxide ion concentration, [OH-], given the following hydronium ion concentrations, [H3O+].
Indicate whether each of the solutions is acidic, basic, or neutral.
a) 5.2 x 10-3 M b) 1.6 x 10-12 M c) 3.4 x 10-10 M d) 4.5 x 10-5 M
10. Calculate the pH of each of the following solutions and indicate whether the solution is acidic, basic, or
neutral:
a) [H3O+] = 3.4 x 10-10 M b) [H3O+] = 2.6 x 10-2 M
- -13
c) [OH ] = 3.4 x 10 M d) [OH-] = 2.6 x 10-4 M
12. Calculate the hydronium ion concentration in solutions with each of the following pH values:
a) 3.4 b) 11.8 c) 2.0 d) 6.5 e) 11.3
Determine the hydroxide ion concentration of each solution.
13. A 662-mL solution is made by dissolving 18.4 g of HCl in water. Calculate the pH of the solution.
14. How many grams of NaOH is needed to prepare 546 mL of solution with a pH of 10.00?
15. Calculate the number of moles of KOH in 5.50 mL of a 0.360 M KOH. What is the pOH of the solution?
16. What is Kb for the equilibrium CN- + H2O ↔ HCN + OH-
(Ka of HCN = 2.1 x 10-9)
17. Calculate the hydronium ion concentration in an aqueous 0.120 M nitrous acid
solution. The principal equilibrium is HNO2 + H2O ↔ H3O+ + NO2-
(Ka = 5.1 x 10-4).
18. Write the base hydrolysis reaction and calculate the Kb of hypochlorite (OCl-), given
that Ka for hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is 3.0 x 10-8.
19. Calculate the hydronium ion concentration in a 0.075 M NH3 solution. The
predominant equilibrium is NH3 + H2O ↔ NH4+ + OH-
20. Calculate the pH of 3.0 x 10-5 M Mg(OH)2, which completely dissociates in solution.
21. Calculate the pH and fraction of dissociation of a 0.0100 M solution of the weak acid
with Ka = 1.00 x 10-4.
22. Calculate the pH and fraction of association of a 0.0250 M solution of the weak base
with Kb = 1.00 x 10-10.
23. For propanoic acid (HC3H5O2, Ka = 1.3 x 10-5), determine the concentration of all species present, the pH,
and the percent dissociation of a 0.100 M solution.
24. A solution is prepared by dissolving 0.56 g benzoic acid (C6H5CO2H, Ka = 6.4 x 10-5) in enough water to
make 1.0 L of solution. Calculate [C6H5CO2H], [C6H5CO2-], [H+], [OH-], fraction of dissociation, and the pH of
the solution.
25. The pH of a 1.00 x 10-2 M solution of cyanic acid (HOCN) is 2.77 at 25 oC. Calculate Ka for HOCN from
this result.
26. Calculate the percent pyridine (C5H5N) that forms the pyridium ion (C5H5NH+), in a 0.10 M aqueous
solution of pyridine (Kb = 1.7 x 10-9). What is the pH of this solution?
27. A 0.40 M solution of a monoprotic acid is 14 percent ionized. Calculate the ionization constant of the acid.
28. What is hydrolysis? Categorize salts according to how they affect the pH of a solution.
29. Specify which of the following salts will undergo hydrolysis: KF, NaNO3, NH4NO2, MgSO4, KCN, RbI,
Na2CO3, CaCl2, HCOOK.
30. Predict the pH (>7, <7, or ≈7) of the aqueous solutions containing the following salts: KBr, Al(NO3)3, BaCl2,
Bi(NO3)2.