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Acids, Bases, and pH Unit 7: Acids and Bases. What are Acids? Definition: Ionic compounds that produce hydrogen ions (H+) when dissolved in water What.

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Presentation on theme: "Acids, Bases, and pH Unit 7: Acids and Bases. What are Acids? Definition: Ionic compounds that produce hydrogen ions (H+) when dissolved in water What."— Presentation transcript:

1 Acids, Bases, and pH Unit 7: Acids and Bases

2 What are Acids? Definition: Ionic compounds that produce hydrogen ions (H+) when dissolved in water What are ionic compounds? Compounds that contain positive and negative ions Example: Hydrogen chloride (HCl) separates into positive hydrogen ions (H+) and negative chloride ions (Cl-) when dissolved in water Creates hydrochloric acid

3 Properties of Acids Acids have certain characteristic properties: They taste sour Can conduct electricity React with metals to form hydrogen gas

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5 Uses of Acids Industry Nitric and Phosphoric Acids are used to make fertilizer Hydrochloric acid used to clean swimming pools, bricks, and concrete Sulfuric acid is important in car batteries Human Body and Foods Carboxylic acid is an important part of the amino acids that make up the proteins in your body Hydrochloric acid is found in your stomach and important to digestion Citric acid is found in Alka-Seltzer and is a common flavoring agent and preservative

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7 What is a Base? Definition: Ionic compounds that produce negative hydroxide ions (OH-) when dissolved in water Example: Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) produces negative hydroxide ions (OH-) and positive sodium ions (Na+) when dissolved in water

8 Properties of Bases Bases have certain characteristic properties: Bitter taste Slippery feel Conduct electricity

9 Uses of Bases Industry/Home Sodium hydroxide is found in many cleaning products Calcium hydroxide is found in concrete Aluminum hydroxide is found in deodorant

10 Detecting Acids and Bases Certain compounds, called indicators, change color when acids or bases come into contact with them An example is litmus paper

11 Strengths of Acids and Bases The strength of and acid depends on how many hydrogen ions it produces when dissolved in water Stronger acid = more hydrogen ions Weaker acid = fewer hydrogen ions The strength of a base depends on how many hydroxide ions it produces when dissolved in water Stronger base = more hydroxide ions Weaker base = fewer hydroxide ions

12 pH Scale Definition: pH is the measure of acidity, or hydrogen ion (H+) concentration, of a substance Acidity is the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution Pure water, which is neutral, has a pH of 7 Lower pH value = higher H+ concentration = more acidic Higher pH value = lower H+ concentration = more basic

13 pH Scale Strongest bases have pH close to 14 Strongest acids have pH close to 0 pH scale is based on powers of ten Example: A solution with a pH of 8 is 10x more basic than a solution with a pH of 7 (10 1 ) A solution with a pH of 9 is 100x more basic than a solution with a pH of 7 (10 2 )

14 Summary Complete your Cornell Notes Summary Key Items: Acid/Base Definition Examples and uses of each pH scale and how it works


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