In order to find the pH, one needs to know the CONCENTRATIONS of the sodium acetate and the acetic acid. Knowing the volumes is not enough information.
There are two possible outcomes depending on how much of each is mixed. Washing soda is sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) while vinegar is acetic acid (CH3CO2H) in water. If there is more washing soda than acetic acid then the products will be sodium acetate (NaCH3CO2) and sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3), also known as baking soda. The reaction will have no visible effect, though there will be a slight increase in temperature. If there is more acetic acid than sodium carbonate, ideally at least twice as much, then the products will be sodium acetate, water, and carbon dioxide. The mixture will bubble vigorously.
There are two types of Buffer solution and both have different preparation:Acidic BufferAcidic buffers are made by mixing a weak acid with its conjugate base.Example:When we mix Acetic acid with Sodium citrate, an acidic buffer is formed.Basic BufferBasic buffers are made by mixing a weak base with its conjugate base.Example:When Ammonium hydroxide is mixed with Ammonium chloride, a basic buffer is formed.
In order to have an effective buffer, one needs to have a weak acid or a weak base, and the salt (conjugate) of that weak acid or weak base. Examples would be :weak acid/conjugate base: acetic acid/sodium acetateweak base/conjugate acid: ammonia/ammonium chloride
H2CO3 is not used as buffer.
acetic,water,soft drinks,glass
- Salt (sodium chloride) react with vinegar (acetic acid) forming sodium acetate. - No.
There are two possible outcomes depending on how much of each is mixed. Washing soda is sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) while vinegar is acetic acid (CH3CO2H) in water. If there is more washing soda than acetic acid then the products will be sodium acetate (NaCH3CO2) and sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3), also known as baking soda. The reaction will have no visible effect, though there will be a slight increase in temperature. If there is more acetic acid than sodium carbonate, ideally at least twice as much, then the products will be sodium acetate, water, and carbon dioxide. The mixture will bubble vigorously.
The neutralization reaction between the sodium bicarbonate which is the baking soda and the acetic acid in the vinegar results in water and sodium acetate. Sodium acetate is a salt that is rather soluble in water, so it dissolves to form a clear solution.
No, but it changes the taste of sugar.
CH3COONa + NaCl --------2 Na+ + Cl- + (CH3COO)-
There are two types of Buffer solution and both have different preparation:Acidic BufferAcidic buffers are made by mixing a weak acid with its conjugate base.Example:When we mix Acetic acid with Sodium citrate, an acidic buffer is formed.Basic BufferBasic buffers are made by mixing a weak base with its conjugate base.Example:When Ammonium hydroxide is mixed with Ammonium chloride, a basic buffer is formed.
This is a neutralization reaction; sodium acetate is obtained.
The acetate would combine with the bromide, leaving the silver in the sodium solution. With the sliver you could blow up the world Alas not so exciting. Mixed as solids, nothing would happen. Silver acetate has limited solubility in water, but if a solution were mixed with sodium bromide, you would probably see some off-white silver bromide precipitate.
You can make it yourself by only mixing vinegar and baking soda and then boiling it until its completely mixed ...that how you make sodium acetate. The reactants are right, but I don't know about the vague instructions.
In order to have an effective buffer, one needs to have a weak acid or a weak base, and the salt (conjugate) of that weak acid or weak base. Examples would be :weak acid/conjugate base: acetic acid/sodium acetateweak base/conjugate acid: ammonia/ammonium chloride
Insufficient information. The desired molarity or normality of the solution is required. For 100 mL of 1.0 molar sodium carbonate dissolve 10.59 grams of anhydrous sodium carbonate in 100 mL water. Insufficient information. The desired molarity or normality of the solution is required. For 100 mL of 1.0 molar sodium carbonate dissolve 10.59 grams of anhydrous sodium carbonate in 100 mL water.
oxidation-reductionWhat type of a reaction occurs when a sodium hydroxide solution is mixed with an acetic acid solution?The answer above is wrong. The correct answer is acid-base neutralization