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This chapter discusses hydrogen ions and their activity in water, including the self-ionization of water, pH and pOH calculations, acid-base reactions, and the concept of neutralization. It also explores the causes and effects of acid rain.
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Chapter 19 Hydrogen Ions and Activity ***CHANGE notes packet….update!!! May 2011
Hydrogen Ions from Water Self ionization of water- the reaction in which 2 water molecules react to give ions Proton Hydronium ion (extra H+) H3O+ H2O loses a H+
What do the new symbols mean? • [ ] means concentration of the compound or ion inside the brackets • So…..[H+] = 4.3 x 105M means that the concentration of hydrogen ion in the solution that you are examining is 4.3 x 105M (moles per liter)
Neutral solution: • [H+] and [OH-] are equal • [H+] = 1 x 10-7 M • [OH-] = 1 x 10-7 M • Ion-product constant for water (Kw) is the product of the [H+] and [OH-] • Kw = [H+] [OH-] = 1 x 10-14
Acidic solution [H+] > [OH-] Basic solution [OH-] > [H+] If the [H+] in a solution is 1 x 10-5 M What is the [OH-] of the solution? Is the solution basic or neutral?
pH Concept Power of hydrogen * pH = -log [H+] (Neutral solution [H+] = 1 x 10-7 M) pH = -log (1 x 10-7 ) pH = 7
Acidic solution pH < 7 [H+] > 1 x 10-7 M Neutral solution pH = 7 [H+] = 1 x 10-7 M Basic solution pH > 7 [H+] < 1 x 10-7 M Ex. [H+] = 1 x 10-2 pH = [H+] = 1 x 10-10 pH = 2 10
pOH The Power of Hydroxide * pOH = -log [OH-] * pH + pOH = 14 In an acidic solution with a pH of 3.25, are there any OH- ions? Yes 3.25 + pOH = 14 pOH = 14 – 3.25 = 10.75
What is the pH of a solution if the [H+] is 6.0 x 10-10 mol/L ?is it an acid or base? • pH = -log [H+] • pH = -log [6.0 x 10-10 ] • pH = 9.22 • Base NEW Calculator - (negative sign) LOG 6.0 EE -10 = OLDER Calculator Conc Log -
What is the [H+] if pH = 3.7? • pH = -log [H+] • -pH = log [H+] • -3.7 = 10H+ • [H+] = 10-3.7 • [H+] = 0.000199526 • [H+] = 2.0 x 10-4 M 3.7 - 2nd button Log (which is 10x)
What is the pH of a solution if [OH-] is 4.0 x 10-11 mol/L? Is it an acid or a base? 1. calculate pOH 2. calculate pH (pH = 14 – pOH) Step 1: Step 2: pOH = -log [OH-] pOH = -log 4.0 x 10-11 pOH = 10.39 pH = 14 – 10.39 pH = 3.6 SO……IT’s an ACID 4 - (negative sign) 2nd button 10x button X (times) 2.5 = log button
[OH-] 1.0 x 10-14 [OH-] 10-pOH 1.0 x 10-14 [H+] -Log[OH-] [H+] pOH 10-pH 14 - pOH -Log[H+] 14 - pH pH
Acid: hydrogen-ion donor : an acid is defined as a hydrogen ion donor (gives) Base: hydrogen-ion acceptor: a base is defined as a hydrogen ion acceptor (takes) Conjugate Acid “Base” Accepts a H “Acid” Gives a H+ Conjugate Base
Conjugate acid- a particle formed when a base gains a hydrogen ion Conjugate base- a particle that remains when an acid has donated a hydrogen ion Conjugate acid-base pair- 2 substances that are related by the loss or gain of a single hydrogen ion
Conjugate Base Acid gives a H+ HCl(g) + H2O(l) → H3O(aq) + Cl-(aq) Conjugate Acid Base Accepts a H
Amphoteric- a substance that can act as both an acid and a base H2SO4 + H2O → H3O+ + HSO4- Acid gives H+ Conjugate Base Conjugate Acid Base Accepts H+
Strengths of Acids & Bases **** • Strength: depends on how much they ionize in water • Strong acids completely ionize in water • Weak Acids: ionize only slightly in water
Concentration vs Strength • Concentration ***** • Strength ***** • number of moles of acid/base in a given volume • How many of the molecules break into ions A concentrated but weak acid can be very corrosive. A dilute strong acid can also be very damaging
Bases • Strong ***** • Weak ***** • Completely dissociate into metal ions, hydroxide ions in water • Partially dissociate into conjugate acid and hydroxide ions
Acid-Base Reactions ******** • Neutralization Reaction: an acid and a base react to produce a salt and water • Double replacement reaction HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) → NaCl(aq) + H2O(l) acid base salt water H2SO4(aq) +2KOH(aq) → K2SO4(aq) + 2H2O(l) acid base salt water
Titration • 1. Add solution from the buret. • 2. Reagent (base) reacts with compound (acid) in solution in the flask. • 3. Indicator shows when exact stoichiometric reaction has occurred. (Acid = Base) • This is called NEUTRALIZATION.
PROBLEM: You have 50.0 mL of 3.0 M NaOH and you want 0.50 M NaOH. What do you do? But how much water do we add?
M1 • V1 = M2 • V2 M1 = 3.0 M ; V1 = 50.0 ml ; M2 = 0.50M Solve for V2 = = M1 • V1 M2 (3.0M) (50.0ml) 0.50M V2 = 300 ml You need a total volume of 300 ml so if you start with 50 ml you will need to add 250 ml of water
***Rainwater • Rainwater is acidic (about 5.6 pH) • due to the reaction of carbon dioxide with water to form carbonic acid CO2 (g) + H2O(l) → H2CO3 (aq) • Both natural and artificial events can add to the acid rain
Acid Rain *** • Acid rain: a fog, • sleet, • snow • or rain • With a pH lower than about 5.6
What contributes to acid rain? • Natural events • Artificial sources (man-made)
Natural events such as: Volcanic Eruptions Forest Fires Lightning Bolts
Natural events such as: produce sulfur dioxide, sulfur trioxide, and nitrogen dioxide
Artificial sources (man made events) • Cars • power plants • factories • add pollutants to atmosphere
What are the major chemicals that create acid rain? Sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) So what happens? SO2 (g) + H2O(l) → H2SO3 (aq) SO3 (g) + H2O(l) → H2SO4 (aq) 2NO2 (g) + H2O(l) → HNO3 (aq) + HNO2 (aq)
Why do we care? • Acid rain can lower the pH of lakes and streams killing aquatic life • Acid rain can leach into soil killing plants • Acid rain can damage buildings (damages metal limestone and concrete.)
**What region of US is most affected?** Northeast (NY / PA / NJ) **Why?** Weather patterns carry the acid rain to the east. Soil in Northeast can not neutralize the acid rain
What has the US done to reduce pollution? • Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 address acid rain. • It imposes emission limits of sulfur dioxide. National sulfur dioxide emissions has decreased 12% from 1988 to 1997
How do they do it? Lower sulfur containing coal and install scrubbers in factory smokestacks