if an acid has a pH of 1.1 what is the hydrogen ion concentration of the solution expressed in scientific notation to 3 significant figures, for my answer can it be written 1 x 10^-1.1 mol dm3? or can you not use decimals in the to the power of so should i write 1.1 x 10^-1

answer can it be written 1 x 10^-1.1 mol dm^-3

While it could be written as that the quection asks for scientific notation and a decimal power is not scientific notation.
Depending on the version of calculator you need to evaluate 1 x 10^-1.1 mol dm^-3

On my Casio fx-83s

key press = <>

<shift><10x><(-)><1><.><1><=>

0.0794 mol dm^-3

7.94 x 10^-2 mol dm^-3

To calculate the hydrogen ion concentration (H+) from the pH, you can use the equation:

[H+] = 10^(-pH)

Given that the pH of the acid solution is 1.1, you can substitute this value into the equation:

[H+] = 10^(-1.1)

To express this in scientific notation with 3 significant figures, you can round the answer:

[H+] ≈ 7.94 x 10^(-2) mol dm^-3

Therefore, you should write the answer as 7.94 x 10^(-2) mol dm^-3, not 1 x 10^-1.1 mol dm^3 or 1.1 x 10^-1 mol dm^3.

To determine the hydrogen ion concentration of a solution based on its pH, you can use the equation:

[H+] = 10^(-pH)

Given that the pH is 1.1, you can substitute this value into the equation to find the hydrogen ion concentration.

[H+] = 10^(-1.1)

To express the answer in scientific notation with three significant figures, you can write it as 1.26 x 10^(-2) mol dm^-3. This way, you round the answer to three significant figures (1.26) and retain the appropriate power of 10 (-2).

Therefore, the correct answer is 1.26 x 10^(-2) mol dm^-3, not 1 x 10^(-1.1) or 1.1 x 10^(-1).