Equilibrium ❮ 227Acid: =0.150mol
1,000 mL100.00mL 0.0150mol
(This number will be used in all remaining steps.)Base: =
0.300mol
1,000 mL25.00mL 0.00750mol(^) Based on the stoichiometry of the problem, and on the moles of acid and base,
NaOH is the limiting reagent.
HNONaOHNaNOHO
init.mo
2 22
0 0150 0 00750
+→+−++
..ll
react.
fi00
−−0 0148..0 00750 ++0 00750..0 00750
nnal 0.00750 0.000 —0. 00750The stoichiometry part of the problem is finished.
The solution is no longer HNO 2 and NaOH, but HNO 2 and NO 2 - (a conjugate
acid–base pair).
Since a CA/CB pair is present, this is now a buffer problem, and the Henderson–
Hasselbalch equation may be used.
pH + pKa + log (CB/CA) = 3.35 - log (0.00750/0.00750) = 3.35
Note the simplification in the CB/CA concentrations. Both moles are divided by exactly
the same volume (since they are in the same solution), so the identical volumes cancel.0.00750molbase
0.12500Lsolution
0.00750molacid
0.12500Lsolution
c. 49.50 mL. Since both an acid and a base are present (and they are not conjugates), this
must be a stoichiometry problem again. Stoichiometry requires a balanced chemical
equation and moles.
HNO 22 +→NaOH Na+++NO– HO 2Base: =
0.300mol
1000 mL49.50mL 0.0148moleBased on the stoichiometry of the problem, and on the moles of acid and base,
NaOH is the limiting reagent.+→++−− ++
HNONaOHNaN+−OHO
init. 0.0150 0.0148mol0 0
react. 0.0148 0.0148 0.0148 0.0148
final 0.0002 0.000 — 0.0148222The stoichiometry part of the problem is finished.
The solution is no longer HNO 2 and NaOH, but HNO 2 and NO 2 - (a conjugate
acid–base pair).