All Questions
Tagged with acid-base experimental-chemistry
124
questions
1
vote
0
answers
34
views
Trends in pKb for both acetic acid and water
I am trying to rationalise a result that I have recently measured in the lab. I'm measuring the pKb of different compounds in anhydrous acetic acid, using the procedure outlined in this paper (https://...
7
votes
2
answers
638
views
Question about the differences of white and grey NaH properties
We are having some problems with the next reaction in our lab. As you can see, is the sulfonylation of an indole in which we use NaH (60% dispersion in mineral oil) as a base. This reaction goes with ...
-2
votes
3
answers
654
views
Can pure hydronium exist?
Can pure hydronium exist? If not, why not? It seems to me (and I am no chemistry expert) like pure hydronium should have the theoretical maximum acidity or minimum pH that a substance can reach.
Can't,...
2
votes
1
answer
268
views
pKa and pKb in solvents other than water
I know that when you have aqueous solutions, then the pKa and the pKb are linked to each other (pKa + pKb = 14). Is there an equivalent relationship between pKa and pKb in non aqueous environments? I'...
1
vote
0
answers
352
views
Can I use a mechanical pipette to transfer strong acid?
I am an undergraduate student majoring in physics. I am looking for the best method to accurately measure the volume of strong acids like hydrobromic $(w(\ce{HBr(aq)}) = 48\,\%)$ and hydroiodic $(w(\...
0
votes
0
answers
62
views
Why does the pH of very strong NaOH solutions not make sense? [duplicate]
I'm wondering why the pH of extreme alkaline solutions, such as the case with $\pu{10 M}$ $\ce{NaOH}$ does not make practical sense and I'm wondering why this is the case? Refer to my calculations ...
0
votes
0
answers
164
views
Why is the pH of this ammonia solution more acidic than another ammonia solution?
I made two similar ammonia solutions in different ways, and they resulted in different pH, but i'm not sure why.
Solution 1
Added 5.84 g NaCl to a 500 mL flask. Then added 10 mL 25% ammonia solution. ...
7
votes
2
answers
1k
views
Mechanism of the blue bottle experiment
I have researched multiple mechanisms for this experiment yet all of them suggest different versions or are too vague. None of them are consistent since the final overall equation seems to be missing ...
2
votes
1
answer
116
views
Difference between change of enthalpy of neutralization between copper and manganese carbonate
I was doing a calorimetry experiment to calculate the change in enthalpy during neutralization reactions between metal carbonates and hydrochloric acid. I experimented with 5 metal carbonates: ...
1
vote
0
answers
416
views
How useful is thymol blue (acid) as an indicator?
The pH range of thymol blue (acid) is 1.2-2.8.. This pH range seems pretty useless. Generally, the sudden change in pH for SA-SB titration occurs in the range of 4-10; the sudden change in pH for SA-...
6
votes
1
answer
67
views
How to make a thin layer of crystalline barium titanate on copper substrate?
Is it possible to create a thin $\ce{BaTiO3}$ crystal layer on a copper plate by putting the plate in a beaker, pouring in heated hydrofluoric acid that has been saturated with $\ce{BaTiO3}$ powder ...
-1
votes
1
answer
106
views
What is the product of the following reaction(different sources give different answers) [closed]
$$\ce{FeS +dil HNO3}$$
$$\ce{FeS +conc HNO3}$$
I got different answers to these reactions in different sources
Source1 Jd lee:
Source 2 Op Tandon:
Can anyone please explain which is the correct one ...
-1
votes
1
answer
105
views
Will concentration of sodium hydroxide affect the result of chicken feather hydrolyzate if i don't standardized it?
The title of the paper:
Isolation and characterization of keratin from chicken feathers https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0002792
Here is the method:
Keratin was isolated by dissolving 5g of chicken feather ...
20
votes
2
answers
3k
views
Why is carbonic acid often ignored?
Water (distilled or not) picks up CO2 from the atmosphere, some of which dissolves to form carbonic acid (H2CO3), lowering the pH by a point or two.
From that it seems like carbonic acid would be the ...
1
vote
2
answers
1k
views
Can ferrous ions exist in an acidic solution?
Can Fe2+ ions exist in an acidic solution or will they always pick up available protons and become Fe3+? My hunch is they can't exist but I'm not really sure.
If the latter, does that mean that ...