Answers: 
25. See below 
26. 9.02 
27. 0.09 mol·L⁻¹ 
Step-by-step explanation: 
25. Buffer Solutions 
a. NH₄Br + NH₃ 
Yes. A solution of a weak base (NH₃) and its conjugate acid (NH₄⁺) is a buffer. 
b. Excess NaOH + HCl 
No. A solution of a strong base is not a buffer. 
c. CH₃COOH + HCl 
No. The strong acid will overpower the weak acid. A solution of a strong acid is not a buffer 
d. Excess HCl + NH₃ 
No. The strong acid will overpower the weak acid, NH₄⁺. 
 
26. pH of buffer 
Data: 
 V = 1 L 
 [NH₃] = 0.1 mol·L⁻¹ 
Mass of NH₄Cl = 96.3 g 
 pKₐ = 9.25
Calculations: 
(a) Moles of NH₄Cl 
n = 96.3 g × (1 mol/56.49 g) 
 = 1.705 mol 
 
(b) [NH₄⁺] 
[NH₄⁺] = 1.705 mol/1 L 
 = 1.705 mol·L⁻¹ 
 
(c). Chemical equation 
 NH₃ + H₂O ⇌ NH₄⁺ + OH⁻ 
(base) (conj. acid) 
 
(d) pH of buffer 
The Henderson-Hasselbalch equation is 
pH = pKₐ + log([base]/[acid]) 
pH = 9.25 + log[(0.1)/0.1705] 
 = 9.25 + log0.59 
 = 9.25 – 0.23
 = 9.02 
 
27. [NH₄⁺] in buffer 
Data: 
[NH₃] = 0.5 mol·L⁻¹ 
 pH = 10 
 
Calculation: 
 pH = pKₐ + log([base]/[acid]) 
 10 = 9.25 + log(0.5/[NH₄⁺]) Subtract 9.25 from each side 
 0.75 = log(0.5/[NH₄⁺]) Take the antilog of each side 
 10^(0.75) = 0.5/[NH₄⁺] 
 5.62 = 0.5/[NH₄⁺] Multiply each side by [NH₄⁺] 
5.62[NH₄⁺] = 0.5 Divide each side by 5.62 
 [NH₄⁺] = 0.09 mol·L⁻¹