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UNIT 14: Acids and Bases, and pH acidic solution basic solution Arrhenius model Brønsted - Lowry model conjugate acid conjugate base conjugate acid-base pair amphoteric Lewis model strong acid weak acid acid ionization constant strong base weak base base ionization constant
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UNIT 14: Acids and Bases, and pH acidic solution basic solution Arrhenius model Brønsted - Lowry model conjugate acid conjugate base conjugate acid-base pair amphoteric Lewis model strong acid weak acid acid ionization constant strong base weak base base ionization constant acid-base indicator end point salt hydrolysis buffer buffer capacity
Acids and Bases: An Introduction All aqueous solutions contain hydrogen ions (H+) and hydroxide ions (OH-). An acidic solution contains: more (H+) ions than (OH-) ions, whereas a basic solution contains: more (OH-) ions than (H+) ions A neutral solution contains: equal concentrations of (H+) ions and (OH-) ions
Aqueous Solutions = acid + base hydrogen ions (H+) + hydroxide ions (OH-) hydronium ion (H3O+) is a hydrated hydrogen ion. The acidic symbols (H+) and (H3O+) can be used interchangeably in chemical equations.
Pure water self-ionizes slightly to form H30+ and OH- ions, as shown in this equation: H20(l) + H20(l) → H30+(aq) + OH-(aq) The equation for the equilibrium can be simplified by removing one water molecule from each side. H20(l) → H+(aq) + OH-(aq)
Submicroscopic Behavior of AcidsHydronium ion formation:HCl + H2O H3O+ + Cl-HNO3 + H2O H3O+ + NO3-
Acids react with bases – the reaction of acids and bases are central to the chemistry of living systems, the environment, and many important industrial processes
Macroscopic Properties of Acids and Bases Taste and feel: Acids: taste sour, conduct electricity Examples: (lemon juice, vinegar) Bases: taste bitter, feel slippery, conduct electricityBases are slippery (soap)
Chemical Properties • Litmus test:Indicators- • change colors in the presence of an acid or a base • Litmus Paper: • base = turns blue • acid = turns red
Monoprotic and Polyprotic Acids • Hydrogen atoms that are bonded to electronegative elements are ionizable • Monoprotic acid can donate only one hydrogen Example- HCl • Polyprotic acids can donate more than one hydrogen atom • diprotic acid has two ionizable hydrogens Example: sulfuric acid • triprotic acids has three ionizable hydrogens Example: Boric acid
Ionization Example Boric Acid, H3BO4 H3BO4(aq) + H2O(l) ↔ H2BO4-(aq) + H3O+(l) H2BO4-(aq) + H2O(l) ↔ HBO42-(aq) + H3O+(l) HBO42-(aq)) + H2O(l) ↔ BO43-(aq) + H3O+(l)
MODELS • The Arrhenius Model • The Bronsted-Lowry Model
The Arrhenius Model • Acids – • produce hydrogen ions in aqueous solution HCl H+ + Cl- • Bases – • produce hydroxide ions in aqueous solution NaOH Na+ + OH-
The Bronsted-Lowry Model Arrhenius concept is limited because it only allows for one kind of base. It expresses the substance. Acid – proton (H+) donor Base – proton (H+) acceptor
Acid – hydrogen ion donor Base – hydrogen ion acceptor Conjugate base – results when acid donates hydrogen ion Conjugate acid – results when a base accepts a hydrogen ion
General reaction for a Bronsted-Lowry acid dissolving in water: • Conjugate acid-base pair: • two substances related to each other by the donating and accepting of a single proton.
Brønsted-Lowry Model • HCl+ H2O H3O+ + Cl- • acid conjugate base • HCl + H2OH3O+ + Cl- • base conjugate acid • HNO3 + H2O H3O+ + NO3- • acid conjugate base • HNO3 + H2OH3O++ NO3- • base conjugate acid
Identify the acid, base, conjugate acid, and conjugate base in the following: HCO3-1 + H2O → CO3-2 + H3O+1 NH4+(aq) + OH-(aq) ↔ NH3(aq) + H2O(l)
What is the conjugate base of the following? • HCl • HCO3- • H2SO4 • What is the conjugate acid of the following? • Br- • H2O • HPO42-
Water as an Acid and a Base • Amphoteric substance – can behave either as an acid or as a base • Ionization of water:
Strengths of Acids and Bases • Strong acids and bases ionize completely • Weak acids and bases ionize only partially
A strong acid contains a relatively weak conjugate base, one that has a low attraction for protons • A weak acid contains a relatively strong conjugate base
Hydrogen and Hydroxide Ions and pH • Acidity or Basicity of a substance is related to the concentration of hydrogen and hydroxide ions in that substance
The product of [H+] and [OH-] is always constant • Kw = ion product constant for water • No matter what the solution contains, Kw will always equal 1.0 x 10-14
1. An acidic solution, where [H+] > [OH-] 2. A basic solution, where [OH-] > [H+] 3. A neutral solution, where [H+] = [OH-] [H+] = [OH-] = 1.0 x 10-7 In each case, however, Kw = [H+] [OH-] = 1.0 x 10-14
Calculate the [H+] or [OH−] and state whether the solution is neutral, acidic, or basic • 1.0 x 10-5 M OH- • 1.0 x 10-7 M OH- • 10.0 M H+
Determining the Acidity of a Solution The pH Scale: 0 – 14 < 7 = acidic 7 = neutral > 7 = basic
A mathematical scale in which the concentration of H+ ions in a solution is expressed as a number from 0 – 14 pH = −log [H+]
What is the pH of solutions having the following ion concentrations? • [H+] = 1.0 x 10-2 M • [H+] = 3.0 x 10-6 M
Because the pH scale is a log scale based on 10, the pH changes by 1 for every power of 10 change in the [H+]
Log scales similar to the pH scale are used for representing other quantities: pOH = −log [OH−]
What is the pOH of a solution having the following ion concentration? • [OH-] = 1.0 x 10-6 M • [OH-] = 6.5 x 10-4 M
pH + pOH = 14 What is the pOH of a solution whose pH is 5? What is the pH of a solution whose [OH-]=4.0 x 10-3 M?
Calculate the pH and pOH of the following solutions: [H+] = 0.000033 M [OH-] = 0.0095 M
It is also possible to find the [H+] or [OH-] from the pH or pOH by undoing the log operation • [H+]= 10-pH • [OH-] = 10-pOH
The pH of a human blood sample was measured to be 7.41. What is the [H+] and [OH-]in this blood?
Neutralization Reactions • Acid + Base → salt + water • HCl + NaOH→NaCl + H2O • Ionic: • Net ionic:
Titration • Method for determining the concentration of a solution by reacting a known volume of that solution with a solution of known concentration. • If unknown is acid, known must be base
Titration Procedure • Measured volume of acid or base of unknown concentration is placed in a flask and initial pH is recorded • Buret is filled with the solution of known concentration (standard solution/titrant) • Standard solution added slowly until neutral pH is reached (equivalence point) [H+] = [OH-]
End point of a titration can be measured using a pH meter or an indicator • Indicator changes color at different pH values
Titration curve (pH curve) – plot of pH vs volume of titrant added
A volume of 18.28 mL of a standard soluiton of 0.1000M NaOH was required to neutralize 25.00 mL of a solution of nitric acid. What is the concentration of the nitric acid?
Buffered Solutions • Solutions that resist changes in pH when acids or bases are added • Weak acid + salt containing conjugate base (strong) • Reacts with H+ and OH- ions so they don’t accumulate
HF + NaF ↔ HF + F- +Na+ Add acid Add base