Chemistry, asked by chonbenthungo8140, 10 months ago

What eill be the volume in ml of .1m caoh2 required to neutralize 10 ml of .1m og hcl?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
12

Answer:

n-factor of Ca(OH)₂ = 2 (because when dissociated, it gives out 2 OH⁻ ions)

Normality = Molarity x n-factor = 0.1 x 2 = 0.2 = N₁

Volume of Ca(OH)₂ required = V₁

Normality of HCl = 0.1 = N₂

Volume of HCl = 10ml = V₂

Using the formula N₁V₁ = N₂V₂

(0.2)(V₁) = (0.1)(10)

V₂ = 1/0.2

V₂ = 5ml

Thus, 5ml of 0.1M Ca(OH)₂ is required to neutralise 10ml of 0.1N HCl.

Hope it helps!!

Answered by CᴀɴᴅʏCʀᴜsʜ
0

Answer:n-factor of Ca(OH)₂ = 2 (because when dissociated, it gives out 2 OH⁻ ions)

Normality = Molarity x n-factor = 0.1 x 2 = 0.2 = N₁

Volume of Ca(OH)₂ required = V₁

Normality of HCl = 0.1 = N₂

Volume of HCl = 10ml = V₂

Using the formula N₁V₁ = N₂V₂

(0.2)(V₁) = (0.1)(10)

V₂ = 1/0.2

V₂ = 5ml

Thus, 5ml of 0.1M Ca(OH)₂ is required to neutralise 10ml of 0.1N HCl.

Explanation:

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