What is the meaning of ''the desired pH adjusted using drops of 2 N HCl and 2 N NaOH'' ?as I would like to do the same recipe to adjust my ph of glucose. Any advice is appreciated, Thank you in advance,

Actually, I don't know what is 2 N of these chemicals, are these concentrations, and if so how to calculate the concentration of these values, please?

1 Answer
Jan 23, 2018

The N should read M.

Explanation:

M means molarity (concentration). Or more specifically #mol.dm^-3#.

You could adjust pH using 2M HCl (Hydrochloric acid) or 2M NaOH (Sodium Hydroxide).

If the pH of your glucose solution is too low (i.e. too acidic) you could add drops of 2M NaOH until the desired pH is reached. This is because you are adding a base (#:OH^-# ions from NaOH) to an acidic solution and are removing acidic ions (#H^+#) with each drop you make. Less acidic ions results in a higher pH.

If the pH of your glucose solution is too high (i.e. too basic) then you could add drops of 2M HCl until the desired pH is reached. Here, you are adding acidic ions (#H^+#) and so making the solution MORE acidic and therefore lowering the pH.