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Aqueous Ionic Solutions and Equilibrium. Chapter 19. Common Ion Effect. Shift in equilibrium that occurs because of the addition of an ion already involved in the equilibrium reaction. What happens to the equilibrium if 0.10 M NaF is added?.
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Aqueous Ionic Solutions and Equilibrium Chapter 19
Common Ion Effect • Shift in equilibrium that occurs because of the addition of an ion already involved in the equilibrium reaction. What happens to the equilibrium if 0.10 M NaF is added? What happens to the equilibrium if 0.10 M NaCl is added?
Buffers • Resist a change in pH when H+ or OH- is added • Components: conjugate acid-base pairs • acidic component reacts with OH- • basic component reacts with H+ • Example: 1.00 L of 0.500 M CH3COOH + • 0.500 M CH3COONa • CH3COOH/CH3COO-
Key Points on Buffers • 1. Weak acids and bases containing common ion • 2. Problems involve: • stoichiometry first • equilibrium second
Buffer Characteristics • Contain relatively large amounts of weak acid and corresponding base. • Added H+ reacts to completion with weak base. • Added OH reacts to completion with weak acid. • pH is determined by ratio of concentrations of weak acid and weak base.
Buffer Capacity • Amount of H+ or OH- it can absorb without a significant change in pH. • For HA/A- system, buffer capacity depends on: • [HA] and [A-] (higher = higher) • [HA] ratio (closer to 1 = higher) • [A-]
Calculations with Ka • Calculate the pH of a buffer consisting of 0.50 M HF and 0.45 M F- • (a) before and • (b) after addition of 0.40 g NaOH to • 1.0 L of the buffer. • Ka of HF = 6.8 x 10-4
Calculations • Find pH of a buffer • Buffer preparation • Find equilibrium concentrations • Helpful: Hendeson-Hasselbach equation
Calculations with Ka • Calculate the pH of a buffer consisting of • 0.50 M HF and 0.45 M F- using the Henderson-Hasselbach equation.
Preparing a buffer • 1. Choose and acid-conjugate base pair • 2. Calculate the ratio of the buffer component pairs • 3. Determine the buffer concentration • How would you prepare a benzoic acid/benzoate buffer with pH = 4.25, starting with 5.0 L of 0.050 M sodium benzoate (C6H5COONa) solution and adding the acidic component? • Ka of benzoic acid (C6H5COOH) = 6.3 x 10-5
Titration (pH) Curves • Plot pH of solution vs. amount of titrant added • Equivalence point: • Enough titrant added to react exactly with solution being analyzed.
Weak Acid-Strong Base Titration • 1. Stoichiometry • Reaction assumed to run to completion • 2. Equilibrium • Use weak acid equilibrium to find pH
Titration Calculations • 1. Solution of HA • 2. Solution of HA and added base • 3. Equivalent amounts of HA and added base • 4. Excess base • A chemist titrates 20.00 mL of 0.2000 M HBrO • (Ka = 2.3 x 10-9) with 0.1000 M NaOH. Find the pH: • (a) before any base is added • (b) when 30.00 mL of NaOH is added • (c) at the equivalence point • (d) when the moles of OH- added are twice the moles of HBrO originally present?
Acid-Base Indicator • Indicates endpoint of a titration • Endpoint is not necessarily the equivalence point
Solubility Constant, Ksp • For solids dissolving to form aqueous solutions. • For slightly soluble salts: • equilibrium between solid and component ions
Ksp • Write the expression for Ksp for • (a) CaSO4 • (b) Cr2CO3 • (c) Mg(OH)2 • (d) As2S3
Solubility Product • Solubility s: • Amount of PbCl2 that dissolves • For: • [PbCl2]dissolved = [Pb2+] = ½[Cl-] • s: varies, especially if common ion is present
Calculations • 1.5 x 10-4 g of CaF2 dissolves in 10.00 mL solution at 18°C. • Write the expression for Ksp. • Find the molar solubility of CaF2. • Find the [Ca2+] and [F-]. • Calculate Ksp. • What is the molar solubility of Mg(OH)2 if the value of Ksp is 6.3 x 10-10?
Complex Ions • Complex Ion: • Charged species - metal ion surrounded by ligands (Lewis bases). • Coordination Number: • No. of ligands attached to a metal ion. • (Common: 6 and 4.) • Formation (Stability) Constants, Kf: • Equilibrium constants for stepwise addition of ligands to metal ions.
Complex Ions • Write the stepwise formation constants for Cr(NH3)63+, starting from Cr(H2O)63+ and NH3(aq) • What is the coordination number of Cr3+?
Applications • Selective precipitation • Exploit differences in Ksp • Qualitative analysis • 1. Insoluble chlorides (Ag+, Hg22+, Pb2+) • 2. Acid-insoluble sulfides (Cu2+, Cd2+, Hg2+, As3+, Sb3+, Bi3+, Sn2+, Sn4+, Pb2+) • 3. Base-insoluble sulfides and hydroxides (Zn2+,Mn2+, Ni2+, Fe2+, Co2+ as sulfides; Al3+, Cr3+ as hydroxides) • 4. Insoluble phosphates (Mg2+, Ca2+, Ba2+) • 5. Alkali metal and ammonium ions