First convert mL to liters. So .05L. We know that we have .400 moles/liter, so multiply .05L*.400 mol/L and the L cancels out, leaving us with .02 moles.
1 litre = 1000 millilitres. You now have all the information required to answer this and similar questions.
50ml = .05L of HCL 1.0 M = 1mol / 1L of HCL simply multiply - .05 by 1.0, and get your answer!
Manchester Airport (MAN/EGCC) in the UK has 2 runways: 05L/23R - this is the original runway 05R/23L - this runway is the airport's 2nd runway and was opened in 2001 Runway numbers correspond to their magnetic headings to the nearest 10 degrees (so runway 23 faces approximately 230 degrees magnetic). Due to the nature of constantly changing magnetic variation runways occasionally require re-designating. As a result of this on 07/06/2007 Manchester re-designated their runways from 06L/24R and 06R/24L to 05L/23R and 05R/23L.
0.050M x .05L = .0025 mol NaHCO3 0.10M x .0107L = .00107 mol NaOH Excess NaHCO3 = .0025-.00107 = 0.00143 pH = pKa2 + log(.00107/.00143) pH = 10.20
I'll assume when you say species, you are referring to the ions of each compound, so we are looking for the concentration of H+, Cl-, and NO3-.To begin, we have 0.2L of total solution (.05L HCl + .15L HNO3).I'll do Cl- first: You have .05L of 0.05mol/L HCl. H and Cl are in 1:1 ratio, so you can say you have 0.05L of 0.05mol/L Cl-.0.05L * 0.05mol/L=0.0025mol Cl- divide this by the total volume, 0.0025 mol/.200L=0.0125M Cl-NO3-: .150L*0.1M NO3-= 0.015mol NO3-/0.200L=0.075M NO3-H+ occurs in both acids so you have to add both amounts to find the concentrations. We know that for HCl, H has a 1:1 ratio with Cl, so if there is 0.0025mol Cl- there must be 0.0025mol of H+.Same with HNO3, there must be 0.015mol H+.Add these together: 0.0025mol+0.015mol= 0.0175mol H+ in total.Divide by the total volume to get concentration: 0.0175mol/.200L= 0.0875M H+