racoll wrote:Are you sure hydroxides and hydronium contribute towards conductivity?
I certainly do.
Most likely, your reaction is based on a line of thought like "at pH 7 only 10 exp -7 of eaxch is around, thids is so little,it can be neglected'. At pH 5 the H3O+ os 10 exp -5, but the OH- is 10 exp -9,
10exp-7 *1- exp-7 = 10 exp-14, just as 10 exp-5 * 10exp-9. In both cases the total cunductivity based on ordinarily ion movement (just as Na+ and Cl- and so on) would, indeed, contribute to nearly nothing.
HOWEVER
Water is a very strange, intersting stuff, in fact it is the most weird thing I know
In water, the watermolecules, H2O, are all conected to each other. The oxygen atom has two spots on it, where they concentrate their negetive charge. Further, even in a molecule, the H is quite positive.
+ attracts -, and thus the O attracts H - apart from the 2 it is bound with.
The bounding can be replaced, and in reality, the bounds keep changing very fast indeed.
Using this system, no molecule needs te be replaced to transport electrical charge, only bounds need to be reconnected - which goes very fast.
If someone would like to do the test:
1 take demineralised (or RO) water - as pure as possible - measure the condutivity
devide the water in two, and add a certain amount of NaCl - say 1 mmol a liter to one part
add a similar amount of hydrochloric acid (HCl) to the other part - so, that the concentration is the same.
measure the conductivity for both.
As both have the same amount of charge carriers, one would expect the same conductivity (try a third batch, with potassium bromide, for instance, as these ions are larger, a slightly , but perhaps not measurable, lower condictivity will result)
The difference comes from the above introduced system