acids & bases
DESCRIPTION
Acids & Bases. 1. Properties of Acids and Bases :. 2. Indicators : Turn 1 color in an acid and another color in a base. A. Litmus Paper: An aci D turns blue litmus paper reD A B ase turns red litmus paper Blue . - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Acids & Bases
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1. Properties of Acids and Bases:
Taste Touch Reactions with Metals
Electrical Conductivity
Acid sour
looks like water, burns, stings
Yes-produces
H2 gas
electrolyte in solution
Base bitter
looks like water, feels
slippery
No Reaction
electrolyte in solution
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2. Indicators: Turn 1 color in an acid and
another color in a base.A. Litmus Paper: An aciD turns blue litmus paper reD
A Base turns red litmus paper Blue.
B. Phenolphthalein: colorless in an acid/pink in a base
C. pH paper: range of colors from acid to basic
D. pH meter: measures the concentration of H+ in
solution
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3. Neutralization: A reaction between an acid and base. When an acid and base neutralize, salts form.
Acid + Base → Salt + Water
Ex) HCl + NaOH → NaCl + HOH
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4. Arrhenius Definition:
A. An acid dissociates in water to produce
hydrogen ions, H+.
B. A base dissociates in water to produce hydroxide ions, OH-.
C. Problems with Definition:
• Restricts acids and bases to water solutions.
• Oversimplifies what happens when acids
dissolve in water.
• Does not include certain compounds that have
characteristic properties of acids & bases.
Ex) NH3 (ammonia) doesn’t fit
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5. Bronsted-Lowry Definition:A. An acid is a substance that can donate hydrogen ions. Ex) HCl → H+ + Cl-
B. A base is a substance that can accept
hydrogen ions. Ex) NH3 + H+ → NH4+
C. Advantages of Bronsted-Lowry Definition•Acids and bases are defined independently of how
they behave in water.•Focuses solely on hydrogen ions.
D. Hydrogen ion is the equivalent of a proton. Therefore, acids are often called proton donors and bases are called proton acceptors.
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6. Hydronium Ion:
A. Hydronium Ion – H3O+ This is a complex that forms in water.
B. To more accurately portray the Bronsted-Lowry, the hydronium ion is used instead of the hydrogen ion.
C. Amphoteric: A substance that can act as either an acid or a base.
Ex.) Water - can gain or lose a H+
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7. Conjugate Acid-Base Pairs:
A pair of compounds that differ by only one hydrogen ion
A. When an acid loses a hydrogen ion, it
becomes its conjugate base.
B. When an base gains a hydrogen ion, it
becomes its conjugate acid.
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Acid (A), Base (B), Conjugate Acid (CA), Conjugate Base (CB)
NH3 + H2O ↔ NH4+ + OH-
HCl + H2O ↔ Cl- + H3O+
• A strong acid will have a weak conjugate base.• A strong base will have a weak conjugate acid.
B
B
A
A
CA CB
CB CA
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STRONG Acid/Base
C. A strong acid or base will completely dissociate (break apart) in water. This is represented by a single () arrow.
HNO3 H+ + NO3-
NaOH Na+ + OH-
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D. A weak acid or base will partially dissociate in water. This is represented by a double (↔) arrow.
CH3COOH ↔ H+ + CH3COO-
NH4OH ↔ NH4+ + OH-
WEAK Acid/Base
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8. Naming Acids Review: A. Binary – H +one anion Prefix “hydro”+ anion name +“ic”acid
Ex) HCl hydrochloric acid
Ex) H3P hydrophosphoric acid
B. Tertiary – H + polyatomic anion no Prefix “hydro”
(oxo) end “ate” = “ic” acidend “ite” = “ous” acid
Ex) H2SO4 sulfuric acid
Ex) H2SO3 sulfurous acid
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15-2 The Self-ionization of Water and pH
1. Water is amphoteric, it acts as both an acid and a base in the same reaction.
Ex) H2O(l) + H2O(l) ↔ H3O+(aq) + OH-
(aq)
2. In pure water at 25C, both hydronium ions and hydroxide ions are found at concentrations of 1 x 10-7 M. Because they are at equilibrium and you do not include liquid water in the equilibrium expression, Keq or Kw (water) can be expressed as follows:
A. Formula for Kw = [H3O+] [OH-]
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A. Formula for Kw = [H3O+] [OH-] 1.0 x 10-14 M = [1.0 x 10-7 M] [1.0x10-7 M]
1.0 x 10-14 M = [H3O+] [OH-]
B. Using Kw in calculations: If the concentration of H3O+ in the blood is 4.0 x 10-8 M, what is the concentration of OH ions in the blood? Is blood acidic, basic or neutral?
Kw = [H3O+] [OH-]
1.0 x 10-14 M = [4.0 x 10-8 M] [OH-] 4.0 x 10-8 M 4.0 x 10-8 M
2.5 x 10-7 M = [OH-]
slightly basic
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3. The pH scale:A. Used to determine if something is an acid or
a base. A way to express H3O+ concentration based on logarithms. pH changes by a factor of 10.
Ex) 10,000 = 104 therefore log 10,000 = 4
0.001 = 10-3 therefore log 0.001 = -3
B. pH 1-6.9: acid
pH 7.1-14: base
pH of 7.0: neutral
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D. pH = -log [H3O+]
E. [H3O+] [OH-] = 1.0 x 10-14M
F. pH + pOH = 14
H+
OH-
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H+
OH
-
[H3O+] [H3O+] [OH-] [OH-]
1x10-14 .00000000000001 1x100 1
1x10-13 .0000000000001 1x10-1 .1
1x10-12 .000000000001 1x10-2 .01
1x10-11 .00000000001 1x10-3 .001
1x10-10 .0000000001 1x10-4 .0001
1x10-9 .000000001 1x10-5 .00001
1x10-8 .00000001 1x10-6 .000001
1x10-7 .0000001 1x10-7 .0000001
1x10-6 .000001 1x10-8 .00000001
1x10-5 .00001 1x10-9 .000000001
1x10-4 .0001 1x10-10 .0000000001
1x10-3 .001 1x10-11 .00000000001
1x10-2 .01 1x10-12 .000000000001
1x10-1 .1 1x10-13 .0000000000001
pH1413121110987654321
EQUAL
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H. Significant Digits Rule
The number of digits AFTER THE DECIMAL POINT in your answer should be equal to the number of significant digits in your original number.
Ex -log[8.7 x 10-4 M] –Calc Answer = 3.0604807474 –Sig Fig pH = 3.06
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Example #1: [H3O+] = 7.3 x 10-5 M What is the pH value? Is it an acid, base or neutral?
Which equation should you use?
Kw = [H3O+] [OH-]OR
pH = -log [H3O+]
pH = -log [7.3 x 10-5M] pH = 4.14 ACID
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Example #2: [OH-] = 5.0 x 10-2 M What is the pH value? Is it an acid, base or neutral?
Which equation should you use?
Kw = [H3O+] [OH-]
ORpH = -log [H3O+]
Kw = [H3O+] [OH-]
1 x 10-14M = [H3O+] [5.0 x 10-2M]
2.0 x 10-13M = [H3O+] pH = -log [2.0 x 10-13M]
pH = 12.70basic
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Ionization of Acids & Bases• H2SO4 2 H+ + SO4
-2 – Sulfuric acid donates 2 H+ ions per mole– This is called a “diprotic” acid
• H3PO3 – Phosphorous acid donates 3 H+ ions per
mole. This is called a “triprotic acid”
• Ca(OH)2 – Calcium hydroxide dissociates into 2 OH-
ions per mole
3 H+ + PO3-3
Ca+2 + 2 OH-1
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15-3 Acid-Base Titration1. An acid-base titration is a carefully controlled
neutralization reaction which can determine the concentration [ ] of an unknown solution.
2. To determine the concentration of an unknown substance, a standard solution is needed. This solution has a known concentration.
3. Titration curve: graph that
shows how pH changes
during a titration.
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4. An indicator, usually phenolphthalein, is used in a titration.
5. The point at which enough standard solution is added to neutralize the unknown solution is called the equivalence point.
6. The point at which the indicator changes color is called the endpoint.
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7. Therefore: [H+] = [OH-] at the equivalence point (which is usually the endpoint)
Volume (acid) Conc.(acid) = Volume (base) Conc.(base)
VaMa = VbMb
(L) x Moles = (L) x Moles
Liter Liter
moles of H+ = moles of OH-
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VaMa = VbMb Ex #1) Solutions of sodium hydroxide are used to unclog
drains. A 43.0 mL volume of sodium hydroxide was titrated with 32.0 mL of 0.100 M HCl. What is the molarity of the sodium hydroxide solution?
HCl (a) = NaOH (b)
(32.0 mL)(0.100 M HCl) = (Mb)(43.0 mL)
43.0 mL 43.0 mL
0.0744 M = Mb
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Ex #2) A volume of 25.0 mL of 0.120 M sulfuric acid neutralizes 40.0 mL of a sodium hydroxide solution. What is the concentration of the sodium hydroxide solution?
H2SO4 + 2NaOH Na2SO4 + 2H-OH
Note: sulfuric acid has 2 H+ per mole of acid
Therefore you need to multiply the acid side by a factor of 2
VaMa x 2 = VbMb
(25.0 mL) (0.120 M) x 2 = (40.0 mL) x Mb
Mb = 0.150 M
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Ex #3) 24.9 mL of 2.88 M calcium hydroxide completely neutralizes 38.9 mL of a hydrobromic acid solution. What is the molarity of the hyrdobromic acid?
Ca(OH)2 + 2HBr CaBr2 + 2HOHNote: there are 2 hydroxide ions per mole of base
Therefore you need to multiply the base side by a factor of 2
VaMa = VbMb x 2 (38.9 mL) x Ma = (24.9 mL) (2.88 M) x 2
Ma = 3.69 M