Solution: To find the volume of benzoic acid in the buffer solution, we can use the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation:
\[ \text{pH} = pK_a + \log \left( \frac{[A^-]}{[HA]} \right) \]
Where: \([A^-]\) is the concentration of the conjugate base (sodium benzoate) and \([HA]\) is the concentration of the weak acid (benzoic acid).
Given Information: pH = 4.5
\[ pK_a = 4.20, \quad [A^-] = 1 \, M \text{ (sodium benzoate)} \]
Total volume of buffer solution = 300 mL.
Calculate the ratio of base to acid:
\[ 4.5 = 4.20 + \log \left( \frac{[A^-]}{[HA]} \right) \]
\[ 0.30 = \log \left( \frac{1}{[HA]} \right) \]
\[ 10^{0.30} = \frac{1}{[HA]} \implies [HA] = \frac{1}{10^{0.30}} \approx 0.50 \, M \]
Calculate the volume of benzoic acid: Let \(V_a\) be the volume of 1M benzoic acid. The concentration in the total 300 mL buffer solution:
\[ [HA] = \frac{V_a}{200} \]
Setting the concentrations equal gives:
\[ 0.50 = \frac{V_a}{200} \implies V_a = 0.50 \times 200 = 100 \, mL \]
Total volume of benzoic acid solution: To find the total volume of benzoic acid needed to maintain the desired pH:
\[ V_a = 100 \, mL \quad \text{(rounded from calculations)} \]
Thus, the volume of benzoic acid solution in 300 mL of the buffer solution is: 100 mL
A body of mass 1000 kg is moving horizontally with a velocity of 6 m/s. If 200 kg extra mass is added, the final velocity (in m/s) is: