Chemistry, asked by satyakumar07770, 1 month ago

The hydrogen ion concentration in mol/litre of a solution of pH =0 is​

Answers

Answered by shreyaasabe10
1

Answer:

pH=−log[H

+

]

5.4=−log[H

+

]

[H

+

]=antilog(−5.4)=3.98×10

−6

Explanation:

hope it helpful

Answered by tulsishetty1806
1

At a pH of zero the hydronium ion concentration is one molar, while at pH 14 the hydroxide ion concentration is one molar. Typically the concentrations of H+ in water in most solutions fall between a range of 1 M (pH=0) and 10-14 M (pH=14).

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