Respuesta :
Hello!
To determine the Kb of gallic acid is actually very simple.
The dissociation reaction of Gallic Acid (HGal) is the following:
HGal+H₂O ⇄ H₃O⁺ + Gal⁻
The equation for converting from Ka to Kb is the following:
[tex]Ka*Kb=Kw \\ \\ Kb= \frac{Kw}{Ka}= \frac{1*10^{-14} }{4,57*10^{-3} }=2,19 * 10^{-12}[/tex]
So, the Kb is 2,19*10⁻¹²
Have a nice day!
To determine the Kb of gallic acid is actually very simple.
The dissociation reaction of Gallic Acid (HGal) is the following:
HGal+H₂O ⇄ H₃O⁺ + Gal⁻
The equation for converting from Ka to Kb is the following:
[tex]Ka*Kb=Kw \\ \\ Kb= \frac{Kw}{Ka}= \frac{1*10^{-14} }{4,57*10^{-3} }=2,19 * 10^{-12}[/tex]
So, the Kb is 2,19*10⁻¹²
Have a nice day!
Answer: The base dissociation constant for a conjugate base is [tex]2.18\times 10^{-12}[/tex]
Explanation:
To calculate the base dissociation constant for the given acid dissociation constant, we use the equation:
[tex]K_w=K_b\times K_a[/tex]
where,
[tex]K_w[/tex] = Ionic product of water = [tex]10^{-14}[/tex]
[tex]K_a[/tex] = Acid dissociation constant = [tex]4.57\times 10^{-3}[/tex]
[tex]K_b[/tex] Base dissociation constant = ?
Putting values in above equation, we get:
[tex]10^{-14}=4.57\times 10^{-3}\times K_b\\\\K_b=2.18\times 10^{-12}[/tex]
Hence, the base dissociation constant for a conjugate base is [tex]2.18\times 10^{-12}[/tex]