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Posted

In a beaker of solution, Each sulphuric acid almost completely ionizes to give two H+ ion when the solution is not at a high concentration.

What I want to ask is, if the concentration of a salt in a solution is very high while the concentration of sulphuric acid is very low, what will the ionization go?

Completely or just give one H+ per molecule?

Posted

what salt are we considering? if it's sulfate/bisulfate, there will be less ionization by the sulfuric acid.

 

btw, H2SO4 almost always ionizes to H+ and HSO4-. very little of that HSO4- ionizes further to H+ and SO4-2.

Posted

But will the concentration of other soluble substance such as (NaCl) affect the rate of the ionization of hydrogensulphate ion? (HSO4-)

Moreover, if the concentration of the sulphuric acid is very higher, many hydrogensulphate ions are not able to ionize. However, in a reaction, the equilibrium goes forward to the right one if the reactants are more than the product. If looking at these two factors, I guess ionization is not a kind of reaction, right? However, new substances are really formed, what's the fact?

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