HCl fully disolvis to H^+ & Cl^-
Hence there are 1.1M of H^+ present and 1.1M of Cl^- present.
pH = -log(10) [ H^+]
In word, 'pH is the negative logarithm to the base ten of the hydrogen ion concentration.
Hence pH = -
pH =log(10)[1.1]
pH = -0.0413
pH =-4.13 x 10^-2
pH ~ 2.0
- log(0.00450 M HCl)= 2.3 pH=======
Since HCl is a strong acid it completely dissociates. Therefore [H+] = [HCl] and this case = 0.25 M. pH = -log [H+] = 0.602
.260 M of HCL, not 260 More than likely correct, but, - log(0.260 M HCl) = 0.6 pH ----------- ( pH can be below 1 )
A 0.1 M concentration of HCl corresponds to a pH of 1.0.
The pH of a 0.140 M HCl solution is approximately 0.85. This is because HCl is a strong acid that completely dissociates in water to give H+ ions, resulting in a low pH.
- log(0.00450 M HCl)= 2.3 pH=======
Since HCl is a strong acid it completely dissociates. Therefore [H+] = [HCl] and this case = 0.25 M. pH = -log [H+] = 0.602
.260 M of HCL, not 260 More than likely correct, but, - log(0.260 M HCl) = 0.6 pH ----------- ( pH can be below 1 )
its PH is 3
A 0.1 M concentration of HCl corresponds to a pH of 1.0.
The pH of a 0.140 M HCl solution is approximately 0.85. This is because HCl is a strong acid that completely dissociates in water to give H+ ions, resulting in a low pH.
The pH of a 0.25 M HCl solution is approximately 0.60. This is because HCl is a strong acid that dissociates completely in water to form H+ ions, resulting in a high concentration of H+ ions and a low pH.
No, pH 2.0 HCl refers to the acidity level of the solution, while 0.1 M HCl refers to the molarity or concentration of the hydrochloric acid. The two terms describe different properties of the solution.
HCl liberates 1M of H+ Ions per mole of HCl so 0.034M HCl = 0.034 M H+ Ions as pH = -log10 [H+] where [] means the conc. pH= -log10 [0.034]
25g HCl 1 mol 36.46g HCl =.686 mol M=.686 mol/1.5 L=.457M pH= -log(.457) pH= .34
The pH of a 0.0020 M HCl solution is approximately 2.7. This is because HCl is a strong acid that completely dissociates in water to form H^+ ions, decreasing the pH of the solution.
The pH of a 0.01 M solution of HCl in water would be approximately 2, since HCl is a strong acid that completely dissociates in water to form H+ ions. This high concentration of H+ ions results in a low pH value.