You are going to standardize your sodium hydroxide by titrating with potassium hydrogen phthalate. As an example, you dissolve 0.3365 g of potassium hydrogen phthalate, otherwise known as KHP (KHC8H4O4) in water in a 250.0 mL Erlenmeyer flask and then add phenolphthalein indicator. You then titrate with your sodium hydroxide solution, which is in a buret, and you determine that the equivalence point is at 12.44 mL of your sodium hydroxide solution. Determine the molarity of your sodium hydroxide solution. What color will the solution of potassium hydrogen phthalate turn to determine when the equivalence point has been reached

Respuesta :

Answer:

0.13 M

Explanation:

The reaction equation is;

NaOH(aq) + KHC8H4O4(aq) ------> KNaC8H4O4(aq) + H2O(l)

Molar mass of KHP = 204.22 g/mol

Amount of KHP= mass/ molar mass = 0.3365 g/204.22 g/mol = 1.65 × 10^-3 moles

n= CV

Where;

C= concentration

V= volume in dm^3

n= number of moles

C= n/V = 1.65 × 10^-3 moles × 1000/250 = 6.6 × 10^-3 M

If 1 mole of KHP reacts with 1 mole of NaOH

1.65 × 10^-3 moles of KHP will react with 1.65 × 10^-3 moles of NaOH

From

n= CV

We have that only 12.44 ml of NaOH reacted

C= n/V = 1.65 × 10^-3 moles × 1000/12.44

C= 0.13 M

At the equivalence point, the KHP solution turned light pink.