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Modern Chemistry Chapter 15 Acid-Base Titration and pH. Sections 1 & 2 Aqueous Solutions and the Concept of pH Determining pH and Titrations. Determining pH and Titration. Chapter 15 Vocabulary. Standard Solution Primary Standard Standardization. Self Ionization pH pOH
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Modern ChemistryChapter 15Acid-Base Titration and pH Sections 1 & 2 Aqueous Solutions and the Concept of pH Determining pH and Titrations Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Determining pHand Titration Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Chapter 15 Vocabulary • Standard Solution • Primary Standard • Standardization • Self Ionization • pH • pOH • Acid-base indicator • Transition interval • Titration • Equivalence Point • Endpoint Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Indicators • Acid-base indicators- compounds whose colors are sensitive to pH HIn H+ + In- p. 511 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Indicators • Transition Interval – the pH range over which an indicator changes color Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Color Range of Indicators p. 513 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Color Range of Indicators p. 513 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Color Range of Indicators p. 513 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
pH of Common Materials p. 512 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
pH Meter • Determines the pH of a solution by measuring the voltage between two electrodes that are placed in a solution Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
How does a pH meter work? In 1901 a German chemist named Fritz Haber discovered that the voltage at certain glass surfaces changed in a regular manner with the acidity of a solution. Modern pH sensing electrodes are a refinement of this fundamental discovery. The pH electrode consists of a thin membrane of Hydrogen sensitive glass blown on the end of an inert glass tube. Because this is a special type of glass and very thin, the bulb is very fragile and great care must be exercised in handling it. This tube is filled with an electrolyte, and the signal is carried through Ag/AgCL wire. This is a pH half cell. Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Titration • The controlled addition and measurement of the amount of a solution of known concentrationrequired to react completely with a measured amountof a solution of unknown concentration. • A quantitative lab procedure to determine concentration or amount. Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Doing a Titration p. 518 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Doing a Titration p. 518 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Doing a Titration p. 518 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Doing a Titration p. 519 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Doing a Titration p. 519 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Doing a Titration p. 519 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Titration Video Glencoe Disc 3 Insert Holt Disc 2 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Titration • Equivalence point – the point at which the two solutions in a titration are chemically equivalent. • MOLESbase = MOLESacid • If the coefficients are all 1 then the mole ratio has no effect so… • MB xLB = MA xLA M = mol/Lmol = MxL Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Titration STANDARD SOLUTION IN BURETTE DATA 25 0.2M mL of base known concentrationof base mL of acid unknown concentrationof acid 10 X M IN FLASK ANALYTE Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Equivalence Points Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Equivalence Point & Endpoint • Endpoint – the point in a titration at which an indicator changes color. If the equivalence point is 7, what is the best indicator to use? Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Titration Curve p. 517 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Titration Curve p. 517 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Standardization • Standard solution – a solution that contains the precisely known concentration of a solute. • The standard solution has be “standardized” (determined its concentration) with a “primary standard” (a solution with a known concentration). Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Molarity & Titration M = mol/Lmol = MxL • MOLESbase = MOLESacid • Calculate the moles of the substance in which you know the molarity and concentration. • Use the mole ratio to convert these moles to moles of the other substance. • Now that you have moles of the other substance divide by liters of that substance to get molarity. Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Sample Problems p.520 In a titration, 27.4 mL of 0.0154 M Ba(OH)2 is added to a 20.0 mL sample of HCl solution of unknown concentration until the equivalence point is reached. What is the molarity of the acid solution? 4.22 × 10−2 M HCl Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Molarity & Titration • Calculate the moles of the substance in which you know the molarity and concentration. 0.0154 M Ba(OH)2 x 0.0274 L Ba(OH)2 =0.000422 moles Ba(OH)2 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Molarity & Titration 2. Use the mole ratio to convert these moles to moles of the other substance Ba(OH)2 (aq) + 2HCl (aq) BaCl2 (aq) + 2HOH (l) 2 mole HCl x 1 moles Ba(OH)2 MOLE RATIO (coefficients) = 0.000844 moles HCl Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Molarity & Titration • Now that you have moles of the other substance divide by liters of that substance to get molarity. 0.000844 moles HCl 0.0200 L HCl = 0.0422 M HCl Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Practice Problems p.521 • 1. A 15.5 mL sample of 0.215 M KOH solution required 21.2 mL of aqueous acetic acid solution in a titration experiment. Calculate the molarity of the acetic acid solution. • 2. By titration, 17.6 mL of aqueous H2SO4 neutralized 27.4 mL of 0.0165 M LiOH solution. What was the molarity of the aqueous acid solution? 1. 0.157 M CH3COOH 2. 0.0128 M H2SO4 Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521
Ch 15 Sec 2 Homework Titration Calculations Worksheet Chapter 15 Sec 2 Determining pH & Titration p. 511-521