As per the following equation, 0.217 g of HgO (molecular mass = 217 g mol$^{-1}$) reacts with excess iodide. On titration of the resulting solution, how many mL of 0.01 M HCl is required to reach the equivalence point?
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Key Points:
Determine moles of reactant (HgO).
Use stoichiometry of the first reaction to find moles of product relevant to titration (OH$^-$).
Use stoichiometry of the titration reaction (acid-base neutralization, usually 1:1 for strong acid/strong base derived ions).
Calculate the required volume using Molarity = Moles / Volume.
Ensure units are consistent (e.g., moles, L, mL).
The problem involves two steps: first, the reaction of HgO with iodide to produce hydroxide ions (OH-), and second, the titration of these hydroxide ions with HCl.
(A) Calculate moles of HgO:
Moles = Mass / Molar Mass
Moles of HgO = 0.217 g / 217 g mol-1 = 0.001 mol.
(B) Calculate moles of OH- produced:
From the reaction equation: HgO + 4I- + H2O → HgI42- + 2OH-
1 mole of HgO produces 2 moles of OH-.
Therefore, 0.001 mole of HgO produces 0.001 × 2 = 0.002 moles of OH-.
(C) Titration Reaction:
The hydroxide ions (base) produced are titrated with HCl (acid):
OH- + HCl → H2O + Cl-
The stoichiometry is 1:1, meaning moles of HCl required equals moles of OH- at the equivalence point.
(D) Calculate moles of HCl required:
Moles of HCl = Moles of OH- = 0.002 mol.
(E) Calculate volume of HCl solution:
Volume = Moles / Molarity
Volume of HCl = 0.002 mol / 0.01 M = 0.002 mol / 0.01 mol L-1 = 0.2 L.
(F) Convert volume to mL:
Volume in mL = 0.2 L × 1000 mL/L = 200 mL.
The volume of 0.01 M HCl required is 200 mL. This corresponds to option (B).