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2 May, 18:43

what mass of sodium fluoride (FW=42.0 g/mol) must be added to 3.50 x 10^2 mL of water to give a solution with pH = 8.40?

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  1. 2 May, 21:12
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    Sodium fluoride, being a salt, dissolves in water completely producing F ⁻ ions. Now F⁻ is the conjugate base of the weak acid HF, so in water we will have the following equilibrium:

    F⁻ + H₂O ⇆ HF + OH⁻

    Given this equilibrium, we need to calculate Kb from the Ka for HF, the [ OH ⁻] from the given pH, and finally the mass needed to produce that OH⁻ concentration.

    The equilibrium constant, Kb, can be calculated from Kw = Ka x Kb, where Kw = 10⁻¹⁴ and Ka for HF is 6.6 x 10⁻⁴ from reference tables.

    Kb = 10⁻¹⁴ / 6.6 x 10⁻⁴ = 1.5 x 10⁻¹¹

    pH + pOH = 14 ⇒ pOH = 14 - 8.40 = 5.60

    [ OH⁻ ] = 10^-5.60 = 2.51 x 10⁻⁶

    Now we have all the information:

    F⁻ HF OH⁻

    Equilibrium X 2.51 x 10⁻⁶ 2.51 x 10⁻⁶

    (2.51 x 10⁻⁶) ² / X = 1.5 x 10⁻¹¹ ⇒ X = (2.51 x 10⁻⁶) ² / 1.5 x 10⁻¹¹

    X = [ F⁻ ] = 0.41 M

    For 350 mL (0.35 L) we need to add:

    0.41 mol HF / 1 L * 0.35 L = 0.144 mol

    and finally the mass will be:

    0.144 mol NaF * 42.0 g/mol NaF = 6.03 g NaF
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