
Concept explainers
Answers to all problems are at the end of this book. Detailed solutions are available in the Student Solutions Manual, Study Guide, and Problems Book.
Calculating pH from [H+] Calculate the pH of the following.
- 5 ×10-4 M HCl
- 7 ×10-5 M NaOH
- 2µM HCl
- 7 ×10-2 M KOH
- 04 m HCl
- 6 ×10-9 M HCl

To determine:
The pH value of given acid concentration.
Introduction:
The pH is the measure of hydrogen ion concentration in a solution. pH value is calculated by taking the negative base 10 logarithm of the hydrogen ion molar concentration. When the hydrogen ion concentration is high, the pH value is low and when the hydrogen ion concentration is low, pH value is high.
It is mathematically represented as follows:
Here,
Answer to Problem 1P
pH
Explanation of Solution
Given information:
HCl concentration
Formula used:
Calculation:
Since, HCl is a strong acid, the concentration of hydrogen ion is equal to the concentration of the acid.

To determine:
The pH value of given base concentration.
Introduction:
The pH is the measure of hydrogen ion concentration in a solution. pH value is calculated by taking the negative base 10 logarithm of the hydrogen ion molar concentration. When the hydrogen ion concentration is high, the pH value is low and when the hydrogen ion concentration is low, pH value is high.
It is mathematically represented as follows:
Here,
Similarly, for a base, pOH can be calculated by taking negative log of the hydroxide ion concentration.
The relation between pH and pOH is as follows:
Answer to Problem 1P
pH
Explanation of Solution
Given information:
NaOH concentration
Formula used:
Calculation:
Since, NaOH is a strong base, the concentration of hydroxide ion will be equal to the concentration of the NaOH.

To determine:
The pH value of given acid concentration.
Introduction:
The pH is the measure of hydrogen ion concentration in a solution. pH value is calculated by taking the negative base 10 logarithm of the hydrogen ion molar concentration. When the hydrogen ion concentration is high, the pH value is low and when the hydrogen ion concentration is low, pH value is high.
It is mathematically represented as follows:
Here,
Answer to Problem 1P
pH
Explanation of Solution
Given information:
HCl concentration
Formula used:
Calculation:
Since, HCl is a strong acid, the concentration of hydrogen ion is equal to the concentration of the acid.

To determine:
The pH value of given base concentration.
Introduction:
The pH is the measure of hydrogen ion concentration in a solution. pH value is calculated by taking the negative base 10 logarithm of the hydrogen ion molar concentration. When the hydrogen ion concentration is high, the pH value is low and when the hydrogen ion concentration is low, pH value is high.
It is mathematically represented as follows:
Here,
Similarly, for a base, pOH can be calculated by taking negative log of the hydroxide ion concentration.
The relation between pH and pOH is as follows:
Answer to Problem 1P
pH
Explanation of Solution
Given information:
KOH concentration
Formula used:
Calculation:
Since, KOH is a strong base, the concentration of hydroxide will be the concentration of KOH.

To determine:
The pH value of given acid concentration.
Introduction:
The pH is the measure of hydrogen ion concentration in a solution. pH value is calculated by taking the negative base 10 logarithm of the hydrogen ion molar concentration. When the hydrogen ion concentration is high, the pH value is low and when the hydrogen ion concentration is low, pH value is high.
It is mathematically represented as follows:
Here,
Answer to Problem 1P
pH
Explanation of Solution
Given information:
HCl concentration
Formula used:
Calculation:
Since, HCl is a strong acid, the concentration of hydrogen ion is equal to the concentration of the acid.

To determine:
The pH value of given acid concentration.
Introduction:
The pH is the measure of hydrogen ion concentration in a solution. pH value is calculated by taking the negative base 10 logarithm of the hydrogen ion molar concentration. When the hydrogen ion concentration is high, the pH value is low and when the hydrogen ion concentration is low, pH value is high.
It is mathematically represented as follows:
Here,
Answer to Problem 1P
pH
Explanation of Solution
Given information:
HCl concentration
Formula used:
Calculation:
Here, ion production of water is considered,
Equation 1:
In the solution sum of positive charges is equal to the sum of negative charges,
Equation 2:
HCl is fully dissociated,
Equation 3:
Substitute equation 2 to equation 3, solve equation 2 to get [OH-] and substitute to equation 1 to get [H+],
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Chapter 2 Solutions
Biochemistry
- A culture of kidneys cells contains all intermediates of the citric acid cycle. It is treated with an irreversible inhibitor of malate dehydrogenase, and then infused withglucose. Fill in the following list to account for the number of energy molecules that are formed from that one molecule of glucose in this situation. (NTP = nucleotidetriphosphate, e.g., ATP or GTP)Net number of NTP:Net number of NADH:Net number of FADH2:arrow_forward16. Which one of the compounds below is the final product of the reaction sequence shown here? OH A B NaOH Zn/Hg aldol condensation heat aq. HCI acetone C 0 D Earrow_forward2. Which one of the following alkenes undergoes the least exothermic hydrogenation upon treatment with H₂/Pd? A B C D Earrow_forward
- 6. What is the IUPAC name of the following compound? A) (Z)-3,5,6-trimethyl-3,5-heptadiene B) (E)-2,3,5-trimethyl-1,4-heptadiene C) (E)-5-ethyl-2,3-dimethyl-1,5-hexadiene D) (Z)-5-ethyl-2,3-dimethyl-1,5-hexadiene E) (Z)-2,3,5-trimethyl-1,4-heptadienearrow_forwardConsider the reaction shown. CH2OH Ex. CH2 -OH CH2- Dihydroxyacetone phosphate glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate The standard free-energy change (AG) for this reaction is 7.53 kJ mol-¹. Calculate the free-energy change (AG) for this reaction at 298 K when [dihydroxyacetone phosphate] = 0.100 M and [glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate] = 0.00300 M. AG= kJ mol-1arrow_forwardIf the pH of gastric juice is 1.6, what is the amount of energy (AG) required for the transport of hydrogen ions from a cell (internal pH of 7.4) into the stomach lumen? Assume that the membrane potential across this membrane is -70.0 mV and the temperature is 37 °C. AG= kJ mol-1arrow_forward
- Consider the fatty acid structure shown. Which of the designations are accurate for this fatty acid? 17:2 (48.11) 18:2(A9.12) cis, cis-A8, A¹¹-octadecadienoate w-6 fatty acid 18:2(A6,9)arrow_forwardClassify the monosaccharides. H-C-OH H. H-C-OH H-C-OH CH₂OH H-C-OH H-C-OH H-C-OH CH₂OH CH₂OH CH₂OH CH₂OH D-erythrose D-ribose D-glyceraldehyde Dihydroxyacetone CH₂OH CH₂OH C=O Answer Bank CH₂OH C=0 HO C-H C=O H-C-OH H-C-OH pentose hexose tetrose H-C-OH H-C-OH H-C-OH aldose triose ketose CH₂OH CH₂OH CH₂OH D-erythrulose D-ribulose D-fructosearrow_forwardFatty acids are carboxylic acids with long hydrophobic tails. Draw the line-bond structure of cis-A9-hexadecenoate. Clearly show the cis-trans stereochemistry.arrow_forward
- The formation of acetyl-CoA from acetate is an ATP-driven reaction: Acetate + ATP + COA Acetyl CoA+AMP+ PP Calculate AG for this reaction given that the AG for the hydrolysis of acetyl CoA to acetate and CoA is -31.4 kJ mol-1 (-7.5 kcal mol-¹) and that the AG for hydrolysis of ATP to AMP and PP; is -45.6 kJ mol-1 (-10.9 kcal mol-¹). AG reaction kJ mol-1 The PP, formed in the preceding reaction is rapidly hydrolyzed in vivo because of the ubiquity of inorganic pyrophosphatase. The AG for the hydrolysis of pyrophosphate (PP.) is -19.2 KJ mol-¹ (-4.665 kcal mol-¹). Calculate the AG° for the overall reaction, including pyrophosphate hydrolysis. AGO reaction with PP, hydrolysis = What effect does the presence of pyrophosphatase have on the formation of acetyl CoA? It does not affect the overall reaction. It makes the overall reaction even more endergonic. It brings the overall reaction closer to equilibrium. It makes the overall reaction even more exergonic. kJ mol-1arrow_forwardConsider the Haworth projections of ẞ-L-galactose and ẞ-L-glucose shown here. OH CH₂OH OH CH₂OH OH OH OH ОН OH он B-L-galactose B-L-glucose Which terms describe the relationship between these two sugars? epimers enantiomers anomers diastereomersarrow_forwardClassify each characteristic as describing anabolism or catabolism. Anabolism Answer Bank Catabolism transforms fuels into cellular energy, such as ATP or ion gradients uses NADPH as the electron carrier synthesizes macromolecules requires energy inputs, such as ATP uses NAD+ as the electron carrier breaks down macromoleculesarrow_forward
- BiochemistryBiochemistryISBN:9781305577206Author:Reginald H. Garrett, Charles M. GrishamPublisher:Cengage Learning
