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75Chapter 6 Equilibrium Chemistry here are ive species whose concentrations deine this system (Ca2+, F–, HF, H3O+, and OH–), which means we need ive equations that relate the concentrations of these species to each other; these are the three equilibrium constant expressions .K 3 9 10[Ca ][F ] 11 sp 2 2 #= = + - - .K 6 8 10 [HF] [H O ][F ] 4 a 3 #= = + - - .K 1 00 10[H O ][OH ] 14 w 3 #= = + - - a charge balance equation 2[Ca ] [H O ] [OH ] [F ]2 3+ = + + + - - and a mass balance equation 2 [Ca ] [HF] [F ]2 # = + + - To solve this system of ive equations, we make a guess for [Ca2+], and then use Ksp to calculate [F–], the mass balance equation to calculate [HF], Ka to calculate [H3O+], and Kw to calculate [OH–]. We eval- uate each guess by rewriting the charge balance equation as an error function error 2 [Ca ] [H O ] [OH ] [F ]2 3#= + - - + + - - searching for a [Ca2+] that gives an error suiciently close to zero. Successive iterations over a narrower range of concentrations for Ca2+ will lead you to a equilibrium molar solubility of 2.1×10-4 M. (b) To ind the solubility of AgCl we irst write down all relevant equilibrium reactions; these are ( ) ( ) ( )s aq aqAgCl Ag Cl? + + - ( ) ( ) ( )aq aq aqAg Cl AgCl?+ + - ( ) ( ) ( )aq aq aqAgCl Cl AgCl2?+ - - ( ) ( ) ( )aq aq aqAgCl Cl AgCl2 3?+ - - - ( ) ( ) ( )aq aq aqAgCl Cl AgCl3 4?+ - - - here are six species whose concentrations deine this system (Ag+, Cl–, AgCl(aq), AgCl2 - , AgCl2 3 - , and AgCl3 4 - ), which means we need six equations that relate the concentrations of these species to each other; these are the ive equilibrium constant expressions .K 1 8 10[Ag ][Cl ] 10 sp #= = + - - . ( ) K aq 5 01 10 [Ag ][Cl ] [AgCl ] 3 1 #= =+ - Be sure you understand why the concen- tration of Ca 2+ is multiplied by 2.