Saturday, October 12, 2019

acid base - Confused on normallity


So normality is 'equivalents' over liters solution right? I'm having a hard time understanding exactly what an equivalent is. At first from one thing I read i thought it was just the H released from acids in the reactions but then something else started talking about ti with compounds without H, and in double/single displacement reactions. From part of what I read it sounds like a single would have 1 eq and 2 for double, but what found to read was pretty brief so I'm not fully sure. Can someone please explain these a bit better?



Answer



Normality = Equivalents of solute/liters of solution


Equivalents are determined by the number of electrons exchanged (or protons in water solutions, or yet other ions in different solvents). For example, if HCl is used to neutralize an alkali, then one mole of HCl will neutralize one mole of NaOH, but it takes two moles of HCl to neutralize one mole of Ca(OH)2 or three moles of Al(OH)3, because they have, respectively, two and three active OH- groups.


There are some pretty clear explanations in more detail at Molarity, Molality and Normality and at Normality.


And then there's Mel Brooks Abby Normal...


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