hey, when you say increase acidity why does that mean less H3O+? I thought the more acidic something was, the more H3O+?Add water --> dilution --> decrease acidity --> increases pH
so A or C
If we increase acidity...that means less H3O+ ions, by Le Chatelier's Principle, a disturbed system shifts to counteract change, hence shifts to the right to produce more H3O+, increasing deg of ionisation
is this correct?
only thing i can think of because increasing vol. of water will have no effect
so is it C?
Hi, but what does water do to it? I'm still confuzzledI probably wouldn't use the word 'ability'. I think degree of ionisation is more so the extend to which the substance will dissociate or the proportion of particles that have dissociated. i.e. high degree of ionisation means the majority or virtually all of the particles will dissociate into ions (like with HCl), low degree of ionisation means only a small percentage of the particles present will dissociate into ions (e.g. acetic acid).
sorry made a mistake, sorry for the confusionhey, when you say increase acidity why does that mean less H3O+? I thought the more acidic something was, the more H3O+?
EDIT: and yes it is C , can you further explain it though?
noalternatively you could use c1v1=c2v2 you'll see that the value of c decrease and dumping that back into -log(conc) you'll see that rise
thanks, this makes much more sense!sorry made a mistake, sorry for the confusion
In this question, imagine this chemical equilibrium in ur mind!
Add water --> dilution --> decrease acidity --> less H3O+ ions --> system wants to produce more H3O+ to compensate for the loss (Le Chatelier's Principle) --> equation shifts to the right to produce mroe H3O+ --> shifting to the right means more acetic acid molecules will ionise into ethanoate and hydronium ions
yes this post is correctSorry to start the thread up again, but just to point out an error. The relative concentration of each of the products (bar water) would remain the same (the concentration of the species in the above equilibrium would be diluted by the same factor).
Hence, it isn't the fact that there is a decrease in hydrogen ions, but rather than there is an increase in the water species which drives the equilibrium reaction forward.