laxboi33 Posted October 6, 2009 Posted October 6, 2009 How many mol of NaHCO3 are needed to completely neutralize 1 mol of H2SO4? answer is 2 mol but why? How many mol of Na2CO3 are needed to completely neutralize 1 mol of H2SO4? answer is 1 mol Na2CO3 (accepts 2 H+) These are notes I wrote in class but i'm not understanding what the question is or why this happens.
hermanntrude Posted October 6, 2009 Posted October 6, 2009 you need to look at the equation for the reaction: [ce]2NaHCO3 + H2SO4 -> 2H2O + 2CO2 + Na2SO4[/ce] To calculate how much [ce]NaHCO3[/ce] is required, simply take the number of moles of [ce]H2SO4[/ce] (1) and multiply by "wanted over given"... what I mean by that is the stoichiometric conversion factor. You can construct the conversion factor from the stoichiometric coefficients in the equation. In this case the stoichiometric coefficient for [ce]NaHCO3[/ce] is 2, and the stoichiometric coefficient for [ce]H2SO4[/ce] is 1. In other words the math requires is like this: 1 mole [ce]H2SO4[/ce] x [math]\frac{2 moles NaHCO3}{1 mole H2SO4}[/math] = 2 moles [ce]NaHCO3[/ce]
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