JoVE Logo

Anmelden

2.13 : Solubility Equilibria: Ionic Product of Water

Pure water is a weak electrolyte; only a small amount ionizes into hydrogen and hydroxide ions. At any given temperature, the concentration of undissociated water is almost constant, so the ionic product of water is the product of the hydrogen and hydroxide ion concentrations, denoted as Kw. The square root of Kw gives the individual ion concentrations.

The ionic product of water varies with temperature, and its value is 1.0 x 10−14 at standard experimental conditions. Per Le Chatelier's principle, if the product of hydrogen and hydroxide ion concentrations becomes more than this value at any point, the excess ions will combine to form water molecules until it reaches equilibrium. Similarly, if the product of ionic concentrations falls below this value, water ionizes to form hydrogen and hydroxide ions to attain equilibrium.

The nature of an aqueous solution–neutral, acidic or alkaline–is defined by the concentrations of the hydrogen and hydroxide ions. In the case of acidic or basic solutions, Kw is still the product of the concentrations of the hydronium and hydroxide ions, but these two concentrations will clearly not be equal to each other.

Tags

Solubility EquilibriaIonic Product Of WaterWeak ElectrolyteHydrogen IonsHydroxide IonsKwTemperatureEquilibriumLe Chatelier s PrincipleAqueous SolutionAcidic SolutionBasic SolutionHydronium Ions

Aus Kapitel 2:

article

Now Playing

2.13 : Solubility Equilibria: Ionic Product of Water

Chemical Equilibria

926 Ansichten

article

2.1 : Ionic Strength: Overview

Chemical Equilibria

1.3K Ansichten

article

2.2 : Ionic Strength: Effects on Chemical Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

1.3K Ansichten

article

2.3 : Thermodynamics: Chemical Potential and Activity

Chemical Equilibria

865 Ansichten

article

2.4 : Thermodynamics: Activity Coefficient

Chemical Equilibria

1.3K Ansichten

article

2.5 : Chemical Equilibria: Redefining Equilibrium Constant

Chemical Equilibria

517 Ansichten

article

2.6 : Factors Affecting Activity Coefficient

Chemical Equilibria

725 Ansichten

article

2.7 : Chemical Equilibria: Systematic Approach to Equilibrium Calculations

Chemical Equilibria

624 Ansichten

article

2.8 : Acid–Base Equilibria: Activity-Based Definition of pH

Chemical Equilibria

535 Ansichten

article

2.9 : Ladder Diagrams: Acid–Base Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

441 Ansichten

article

2.10 : Ladder Diagrams: Redox Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

422 Ansichten

article

2.11 : Ladder Diagrams: Complexation Equilibria

Chemical Equilibria

314 Ansichten

article

2.12 : Solubility Equilibria: Overview

Chemical Equilibria

585 Ansichten

article

2.14 : Complexation Equilibria: Overview

Chemical Equilibria

609 Ansichten

article

2.15 : Complexation Equilibria: The Chelate Effect

Chemical Equilibria

430 Ansichten

See More

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten