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SCH4U Unit #2: EQUILIBRIUM . Ms. Cornacchione Wed Mar 19 th 2014. AGENDA. Test 3 – Equilibrium Part 1 Continue with Acid-Base Equilibrium Notes and Examples. Unit #2: Acid/Base Equilibrium TOPICS. Bronsted Lowry Acids & Bases (8.1) Strong and Weak Acids & Bases (8.2)
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SCH4UUnit #2: EQUILIBRIUM Ms. Cornacchione Wed Mar 19th 2014
AGENDA • Test 3 – Equilibrium Part 1 • Continue with Acid-Base Equilibrium Notes and Examples
Unit #2: Acid/Base EquilibriumTOPICS • Bronsted Lowry Acids & Bases (8.1) • Strong and Weak Acids & Bases (8.2) • Acid Calculations (8.4) • Base Calculations • Acid-Base Properties of Salts • Acid-Base Titration • Buffer Systems
Acid Calculations • Strong acids (ionize completely) • Can assume [H+] = [HA(aq)] to calculate pH • Weak acids (ionize partially) • Must consider EQM (Initial, Change, and EQM Concs) and Ka, to calculate pH • Percent Ionization – percentage of solute that ionizes when it dissolves in a solvent
EXAMPLES – CalcKa from % Ionization (TIP: Use an ICE Table)
EXAMPLES – Calc pH from Ka (TIP: Use an ICE Table)
Polyprotic Acids Monoprotic acids – possesses only one ionizable (acidic) hydrogen atom (eg. HCl(aq)) Polyprotic acids – possesses more than one ionizable (acidic) hydrogen atom (eg. H2SO4(aq)) H2A ⇌ H+ + HA- Ka1= [H+][HA-] [H2A] HA-⇌ H+ + A- Ka2 = [H+ ][A-] [HA- ]
Practice Makes Perfect!! • Page 525 Q#1-9 • Complete the “Acid-Base EQM” Worksheet
Unit #2: Acid/Base EquilibriumTOPICS • Bronsted Lowry Acids & Bases (8.1) • Strong and Weak Acids & Bases (8.2) • Acid Calculations (8.4) • Base Calculations (8.5) • Acid-Base Properties of Salts • Acid-Base Titration • Buffer Systems
Base Calculations • Strong bases (ionize completely) pH + pOH = 14 • Weak bases (ionize partially) • Must consider EQM and Kb, to calculate pOH
Unit #2: Acid/Base EquilibriumTOPICS • Bronsted Lowry Acids & Bases • Strong and Weak Acids & Bases • Acid Calculations • Base Calculations • Acid-Base Properties of Salts • Acid-Base Titration • Buffer Systems
Acid-Base Properties of Salt Solutions • Many salts are highly soluble in water and easily dissociate into ions that may or may not change the pH of the solution (acidic, basic, or neutral) • We must consider how well each ion acts as an acid or a base (the stronger one wins!)
Hydrolysis of Metallic and Non-metallic Oxides • Metallic • Non-metallic
Practice Makes Perfect • Complete all Section 8.6 Practice Problems • Do Page 539 Q#2-5