Equilibrium and Kinetics

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Physical Chemistry › Equilibrium and Kinetics

Questions 1 - 10
1

A 50mL 0.2M hydrofluoric acid solution is titrated with a 0.2M sodium hydroxide solution. What is the pH of the solution when 50mL of sodium hydroxide has been added?

Explanation

This question is not as easy as just assuming that the pH is 7 because there are equal amounts of acid and base. The reason is because although the acid and base have neutralized each other, there is still the issue of the fluoride ion acting as a conjugate base. The equation for this reaction is:

(The sodium ion has been omitted, as it is simply a spectator ion).

By converting each amount of acid and base to moles, we can find that 0.01 moles of each has been added, neutralizing each other in the process. According to the equation, that will leave us with 0.01 moles of fluoride ions. In order to find the concentration, we simply divide this by the new volume after all of the base has been added:

Next, we can determine the base dissociation constant for the fluoride ion by using the equation

Finally, we use an ICE table in order to determine the hydroxide concentration in the solution.

The fluoride ion concentration will decrease by , and both the hydroxide and hydrofluoric acid concentrations will increase by . This leaves us with the equilibrium expression:

Using the pH equation, we determine the new pH of the system to be 8.07.

2

A 50mL 0.2M hydrofluoric acid solution is titrated with a 0.2M sodium hydroxide solution. What is the pH of the solution when 50mL of sodium hydroxide has been added?

Explanation

This question is not as easy as just assuming that the pH is 7 because there are equal amounts of acid and base. The reason is because although the acid and base have neutralized each other, there is still the issue of the fluoride ion acting as a conjugate base. The equation for this reaction is:

(The sodium ion has been omitted, as it is simply a spectator ion).

By converting each amount of acid and base to moles, we can find that 0.01 moles of each has been added, neutralizing each other in the process. According to the equation, that will leave us with 0.01 moles of fluoride ions. In order to find the concentration, we simply divide this by the new volume after all of the base has been added:

Next, we can determine the base dissociation constant for the fluoride ion by using the equation

Finally, we use an ICE table in order to determine the hydroxide concentration in the solution.

The fluoride ion concentration will decrease by , and both the hydroxide and hydrofluoric acid concentrations will increase by . This leaves us with the equilibrium expression:

Using the pH equation, we determine the new pH of the system to be 8.07.

3

A 50mL 0.2M hydrofluoric acid solution is titrated with a 0.2M sodium hydroxide solution. What is the pH of the solution when 50mL of sodium hydroxide has been added?

Explanation

This question is not as easy as just assuming that the pH is 7 because there are equal amounts of acid and base. The reason is because although the acid and base have neutralized each other, there is still the issue of the fluoride ion acting as a conjugate base. The equation for this reaction is:

(The sodium ion has been omitted, as it is simply a spectator ion).

By converting each amount of acid and base to moles, we can find that 0.01 moles of each has been added, neutralizing each other in the process. According to the equation, that will leave us with 0.01 moles of fluoride ions. In order to find the concentration, we simply divide this by the new volume after all of the base has been added:

Next, we can determine the base dissociation constant for the fluoride ion by using the equation

Finally, we use an ICE table in order to determine the hydroxide concentration in the solution.

The fluoride ion concentration will decrease by , and both the hydroxide and hydrofluoric acid concentrations will increase by . This leaves us with the equilibrium expression:

Using the pH equation, we determine the new pH of the system to be 8.07.

4

A 50mL 0.2M hydrofluoric acid solution is titrated with a 0.2M sodium hydroxide solution. What is the pH of the solution when 20mL of base has been added?

Explanation

Since hydrofluoric acid is a weak acid, we need to consider how much of the conjugate base is created when the base neutralizes the acid. We can start by determining how many moles of acid are present initially.

Using the same equation, we find that only 0.004 moles of base have been added.

After the acid and base cancel each other out, we are left with 0.006 moles of acid and 0.004 moles of the conjugate base. This is based on the neutralization equation:

(For simplicity, the bystander sodium ion has been omitted, although it is present).

Now that we know the amount of acid and conjugate base, we can solve for the pH using the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation.

5

Consider the following reaction parameters.

Substrate concentration =

Michaelis constant =

What can you conclude about the reaction rate?

The reaction rate is

The reaction rate is

The reaction rate is

The reaction rate cannot be determined from the given information

Explanation

To solve this problem we need to use the Michaelis-Menten equation.

where is reaction rate, is maximum reaction rate, is substrate concentration, and is the Michaelis constant. If we plug in the given values we get a reaction rate of

Note that the Michaelis-Menten equation implies that the will never exceed . Regardless of how high the substrate concentration is, the reaction rate will approach but will never equal or exceed it. You can try this by substituting very high values for substrate concentration. The will get very close to 0.2 () but will never equal or exceed it.

6

Consider the following reaction parameters.

Substrate concentration =

Michaelis constant =

What can you conclude about the reaction rate?

The reaction rate is

The reaction rate is

The reaction rate is

The reaction rate cannot be determined from the given information

Explanation

To solve this problem we need to use the Michaelis-Menten equation.

where is reaction rate, is maximum reaction rate, is substrate concentration, and is the Michaelis constant. If we plug in the given values we get a reaction rate of

Note that the Michaelis-Menten equation implies that the will never exceed . Regardless of how high the substrate concentration is, the reaction rate will approach but will never equal or exceed it. You can try this by substituting very high values for substrate concentration. The will get very close to 0.2 () but will never equal or exceed it.

7

Which of the following molecules will increase the speed of a biological reaction?

DNAase

ATP

Histones

More than one of these

Explanation

The speed of a reaction is increased when the amount of reactants reaching the activation energy (energy barrier) is increased. This can be done via two ways: increasing temperature or adding a catalyst. Increasing temperature will add kinetic energy to the reactant and increase the amount of reactants reaching the energy barrier. Adding a catalyst will decrease the activation energy and, subsequently, increase the amount of reactants reaching the energy barrier.

Since the temperature is kept relatively constant in the human body (due to homeostasis), the most common way human body increases the speed of a reaction is by using catalysts. Biological catalysts are called enzymes and they are usually named with the suffix -ase. The only molecule that is an enzyme in this question is DNAase, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of phosphodiester bonds in the backbone of DNA.

ATP provides energy for active reactions but it cannot speed up the reaction. Histones are proteins found in nucleus that are involved in DNA packaging. They are irrelevant to this question.

8

Which of the following parameter(s) is/are unaltered in an adiabatic reaction?

Both of these

Heat inside the system

Heat in the surroundings

Neither of these

Explanation

An adiabatic reaction is characterized as a reaction that neither gains nor loses net heat. This means that the process of converting the reactants to products does not alter the heat in the system (reaction) or the surroundings; therefore, both the heat inside and outside the system will be constant.

9

A 50mL 0.2M hydrofluoric acid solution is titrated with a 0.2M sodium hydroxide solution. What is the pH of the solution when 20mL of base has been added?

Explanation

Since hydrofluoric acid is a weak acid, we need to consider how much of the conjugate base is created when the base neutralizes the acid. We can start by determining how many moles of acid are present initially.

Using the same equation, we find that only 0.004 moles of base have been added.

After the acid and base cancel each other out, we are left with 0.006 moles of acid and 0.004 moles of the conjugate base. This is based on the neutralization equation:

(For simplicity, the bystander sodium ion has been omitted, although it is present).

Now that we know the amount of acid and conjugate base, we can solve for the pH using the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation.

10

Which of the following parameter(s) is/are unaltered in an adiabatic reaction?

Both of these

Heat inside the system

Heat in the surroundings

Neither of these

Explanation

An adiabatic reaction is characterized as a reaction that neither gains nor loses net heat. This means that the process of converting the reactants to products does not alter the heat in the system (reaction) or the surroundings; therefore, both the heat inside and outside the system will be constant.

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