Talk:Inorganic nonaqueous solvent

Latest comment: 17 years ago by Cubbi in topic This is a mess

The molarity of pure water is NOT equal to one!

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The expression for the acid dissociation constant of hydronium is [H+][H2O]/[H3O+], or, because [H+]=[H3O+], simply [H2O], the molarity of pure water. This is approx. 55.5 or 55.6, molarity is moles per liter, not moles per mole. Hence, pKa of hydronium is about -1.74, NOT zero. Because a strong acid must be stronger than the protonated solvent, an acid is only strong in the proper sense if its pKa is less than -1.74. Also, because Ka * Kb = Kw, the pKa of water is 14.00 - (-1.74) = 15.74, NOT 14.00! It is a very common error (I'll even confess, I used to make it frequently!) to assume that [H2O] = 1 without even thinking about it. BE CAREFUL, Physchim62 and all others! -User: Nightvid

The problem is that pKa values of acids in aqueous solutions are quoted according to the convention that a(H2O) = 1. This causes a systematic difference with the "true" thermodynamic values, as you point out, but this difference is the same for all acids considered. What is not valid is to compare values calculated on the basis that a(H2O) = 1 (that is the overwhelming majority of published values) with those calculated according to a different convention. You should also note that [H+] in aqueous solution is negligeably low, and that the acidity of aqueous strong acids is due to H5O2+. Physchim62 (talk) 16:16, 16 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
The convention of omitting [H2O] in the standard general expressions of Ka and Kb cannot be generalized in such a manner without leading to inconsistencies. Sure, the convention says that we omit [H2O] when it appears in the general complete equilibrium constant expression (once in the denominator only in the case of Ka). But just as the Ka of an acid is not the same as the Keq, which does NOT omit [H2O], the Ka of hydronium (ok, to split hairs, this means "hydrated hydronium", [H3O(H2O)n]+ for our purposes here) is not one, but rather the molarity of water. You could make a special rule and define it to be 1, but if you did, the comparison to another acid would become invalid, since you would be leaving out the [H2O] on the numerator of the expression as well as the denominator, while on the other acid this doesn't happen. So sure, if you want to insist that pKa of hydronium is zero, fine. But then you can't turn around and say that pKa < 0 makes a strong acid because the omission of the [H2O] in the numerator means you're comparing apples to oranges. The assumption that a lower pKa means a stronger acid only is valid if the expressions are consistent with each other. An acid in aqueous solution is a better proton donor than hydrated hydronium ONLY IF pKa < -1.74. Also, as mentioned earlier, the pKw of water is 14.00 since both of the [H2O] terms in the denominator of Kw are omitted. But by the general definition of pKa and pKb, which only omit ONE [H2O] in the denominator of Ka or Kb, those must be 14.00 + log10[H2O] = 15.74. And the pKeq, because it doesn't omit either [H2O] in the standard general expression of Keq, is 17.48 (14.00+2 log10[H2O]). Have I explained it understandably now? -User:Nightvid
What does water have to do with the content of the article, anyway??? Cubbi 04:16, 7 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Transforming

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couldnt we add so that u can get the self ionization of any solution if u know its Ka or Kb? and also so that if we know its Ka we can figure out its Kb

No. Ka of a compound is measured in another solvent, and it changes greatly if you change the solvent. Self-ionization is essentially the Ka of the compound measured in itself Cubbi 04:27, 7 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

This is a mess

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Okay so this article was 95% about acid-base reactions in nonaqueous solvents, and the only solvent it listed was ammonia! I started a couple of sections on the actual use of the nonaqueous solvents, but they needs lots and lots of expansion! A lot of the old acid-base content intersects with Acid-base reaction theories - should this whole section be moved from this page to that one? Is *is* theory, after all. I wish I had time to really sit down with this article... Cubbi 04:28, 7 April 2007 (UTC)Reply