chapter 2.2 - acids and bases

15
Chapter 2.2 - Acids and Bases p. 42-43 in Prentice Hall Biology, Miller and Levine

Upload: jolene

Post on 19-Feb-2016

30 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

DESCRIPTION

p. 42-43 in Prentice Hall Biology, Miller and Levine. Chapter 2.2 - Acids and Bases. Double, double toil and trouble ; Fire burn, and cauldron bubble…. What just happened with the witches and their pink potion?. Indicators. Chemicals that respond to a change in H ion concentration - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

Chapter 2.2 - Acids and Bases

p. 42-43 in Prentice Hall Biology, Miller and Levine

Page 2: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn, and cauldron bubble…

What just happened with the witches and their pink potion?

Page 3: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

Indicators

Chemicals that respond to a change in H ion concentration

Change color depending on whether substance is an acid or a base

Examples: litmus paper phenolphthalein

Page 4: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

Ions

What is an ion?

Answer: positively or negatively charged atom

Page 5: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

What is an Acid?

A compound that forms H+ ions in a solution

Example: Hydrochloric acid produced by stomach to digest food (HCl), carbonic acid in carbonated pop (HCO3), sulfuric acid in car batteries (H2SO4)

Page 6: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

Characteristics of Acids

Contains Hydrogen (H+)

Turns litmus paper red

Tastes sour

Dissolves metal

Page 7: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

What is a Base?

A compound that forms hydroxide ions (OH-) in a solution

Example: Lye

Page 8: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

Characteristics of Bases

Contains Hydroxide

Turns litmus paper blue

Tastes bitter

Feels slippery

Page 9: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

How Do We Measure Acids and Bases?

The pH scale

What does pH stand for

Power of Hydrogen

Scale ranges from 0 to 14

Page 10: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

pH Scale: Acids

Acids have a pH below 7

Strong acids range from 1 to 3

Strong acid example: HCl

Page 11: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

pH Scale: Bases

Bases have a pH above 7

Strong bases range from 11 to 14

Strong base example: lye, bleach, drano, Sodium hydroxide (NaOH)

Page 12: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases
Page 13: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

pH Scale

pH increases tenfold

Page 14: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

Water, Acids and Bases

A water molecule can react to form ions

Page 15: Chapter 2.2  -  Acids and Bases

Water is Neutral

Why is pure water considered “neutral”?

Pure water pH = 7

Number of positive hydrogen ions equal to negative hydroxide ions produced