I found this question on the internet that said:
Find the pOH of the solution obtained by mixing $\pu{0.1 mol}$ of $\mathrm{NH_4 OH}$ $(K_\mathrm b = 10^{-5})$ and $\pu{0.1 mol}$ of $\ce{(NH4)2SO4}$ in a $\pu{500 mL}$ solution.
What my approach was to do it without applying the Henderson Hasselbalch equation and doing it from the scratch using the "common ion" effect. Here is how I did it:
$\ce{NH4OH}$ is a weak acid and $\ce{(NH4)2SO4}$ is a strong electrolyte.
$\alpha$= The dissociation constant per mole
$$\ce{NH4OH <<=> NH4+ + OH-}$$
\begin{array}{l|c|c|c} \hline n_\mathrm{initial} & 0.1& 0 &0\\ n_\mathrm{equilibrium} &0.1(1-\alpha) &0.1\alpha& 0.1\alpha \\ \hline \end{array}
$$\ce{(NH4)2SO4 -> 2 NH4+ + SO4^2-}$$
\begin{array}{l|c|c|c} \hline n_\mathrm{initial} & 0.1& 0 &0\\ n_\mathrm{dissociation} &0 &0.2 & 0.1\\ \hline \end{array}
Now, we can say that $$K_\mathrm b = \frac{[\ce{NH4+}] [\ce{OH-}]}{[\ce{NH_4OH}]}$$
$$10^{-5}= \frac{\dfrac{0.2+0.1 \alpha}{0.5} \times \dfrac{0.1 \alpha}{0.5}}{\dfrac{0.1}{0.5}}$$
As, $\alpha$ is very small for a weak acid, $0.1 \alpha \approx 0$. Doing the further calculations, we get:
$$\boxed{\alpha = \frac{5}{2} \times 10^{-5}}$$
$$\implies \boxed{\ce{[OH-]} = 0.1 \alpha = \frac{5}{2} \times 10^{-6} \frac{\pu{mol}}{\pu{500 mL}}}$$
Now, $$\mathrm p\ce{OH}=\log[\ce{OH-}] = -[\log(5)-\log(2)-6] = \boxed{5.6}$$
But if we directly apply the Henderson Hasselbalch equation for the buffer, we get:
$$\mathrm p\ce{OH} = \mathrm pK_\mathrm b + \log\left(\frac{[\mathrm{salt}]}{[\mathrm{base}]}\right)$$ $$\mathrm p\ce{OH} = 5 + \log\left(\frac{\dfrac{0.2}{0.5}}{\dfrac{0.1}{0.5}} \right) = 5+ \log(2)=\boxed{5.3}$$ [.] = molarity
Where did I go wrong in the calculation or what mistake did I do while solving this question?