Find the pH and pOH of a solution that is 1.04x10^-4 M HCl.

Do i have to use an ice table to solve this? or is there a short cut? please help

No. HCl is a strong acid (100% ionized), so the H^+ concentration is 1.04 x 10^-4 M.

To find the pH and pOH of a solution that is 1.04x10^-4 M HCl, you don't need to use an ice table or any calculations involving equilibrium.

Since HCl is a strong acid, it completely ionizes in water, meaning it dissociates into H^+ ions and Cl^- ions. In this case, the concentration of H^+ ions is equal to the concentration of HCl.

Therefore, the pH of the solution is equal to the negative logarithm (base 10) of the H^+ concentration:

pH = -log[H^+]

pH = -log(1.04x10^-4)

pH ≈ 3.98

Similarly, the pOH is equal to the negative logarithm (base 10) of the OH^- concentration, which can be calculated using the concept of Kw (the self-ionization constant of water).

Kw = [H^+][OH^-]

At a neutral pH, [H^+] = [OH^-], so we can assume the concentration of OH^- is the same as the concentration of H^+.

Therefore, pOH = -log[H^+]

pOH = -log(1.04x10^-4)

pOH ≈ 3.98

So, the pH and pOH of the given solution are both approximately equal to 3.98.

Since HCl is a strong acid, it fully dissociates in water, meaning that it completely ionizes into H+ ions and Cl- ions. So, the concentration of H+ ions is equal to the original concentration of HCl, which is 1.04 x 10^-4 M.

To find the pH of the solution, you can use the formula:

pH = -log[H+]

Substituting the concentration of H+ ions, we have:

pH = -log(1.04 x 10^-4)
pH = -(-3.983) (taking the negative logarithm value)
pH ≈ 3.983

To find the pOH of the solution, you can use the formula:

pOH = -log[OH-]

Since this is a strong acid solution, the concentration of OH- ions is negligible. Therefore, the pOH can be assumed to be 0.

So, the pH of the solution is approximately 3.983, and the pOH is 0.