delco714 Posted October 26, 2008 Posted October 26, 2008 (edited) Lemon juice has a pH of about 2.5. Assuming that the acidity of lemon juice is due solely to citric acid, that citric acid is a monoprotic acid, and that the density of lemon juice is 1.0 g/mL, then the citric acid concentration calculates to 0.5% by mass. Estimate the volume of 0.0100 M NaOH required to neutralize a 3.71-g sample of lemon juice. The molar mass of citric acid is 190.12 g/mol. ANSWER IN ml of 0.0100 M NaOH. i did: 3.71g X 0.005 = 0.0186 g citric acid 0.0186g / (190.12g/mole) = 0.0000977 mole 0.0000977 mole X 39.997 g/mole NaOH = 0.00391g NaOH V = 0.00391 / 0.0100 M = .39008 L NaOH = 390.08 mL NaOH says it's wrong.. Edited October 26, 2008 by delco714
John Cuthber Posted October 26, 2008 Posted October 26, 2008 I think you have multiplied by the molar mass of NaOH twice. .0000977 moles of acid takes the same number of moles of NaOH and you can calculate the volume of that without needing the molar mass of NaOH. 0.0000997mol/0.0100 mol/litre =x mol
delco714 Posted October 26, 2008 Author Posted October 26, 2008 but... MOLE / (MOLE/L) = x Liters...which is 0.00997 L.. which does = 9.97 mL... did you mean Liters and mistakenly put mole?
John Cuthber Posted October 26, 2008 Posted October 26, 2008 Oops! that last unit should be litres. 10 ml is a perfectly reasonable answer for a titration.
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