Chapter 19 Acids and Bases

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Review Acids and Bases. Acids taste ______ and bases taste _______? Sour, bitter.
Advertisements

Special Substances. IV. Strength of conjugates The stronger the acid or base is, the weaker its conjugate base. For example, HCl is a strong acid so its.
1 Chapter 19 Objectives: 1) Differentiate between acids and bases. 2) Explain the following three acid-base theories: Arrhenius, Bronsted-Lowry, Lewis.
Chapters 14 & 15: Acids and Bases
Acids and bases Chapter 19.
Acids, Bases and Salts.
Self-ionization of Water and pH
Chapter 19 – Acids, Bases, and Salts
Acids and Bases.
Theories of Acids and Bases
PROPERTIES OF ACIDS & BASES
Introduction to Acids & Bases
Chapter 19 Notes: Part II Acid/Base Theories.
Chapter 18 Acids and Bases.
Warm-Up Find the Molarity of the following.
Neutralization & Titration
I. Introduction to Acids & Bases
Chapter 15 Multiple Choice 1. Distilled water contains A. H2O.
ACIDS and BASES Unit 10, Chapter 19
Acid and Bases: An Introduction
Drill If I want to make a 2.3M solution of NaCl in 893mL of water, how many grams of NaCl do I need to add?
Acids and Bases! Created by Educational Technology Network
Acids Bases.
Acids and Bases.
Acid/Base Chemistry.
PROPERTIES OF ACIDS & BASES
Acids and Bases Chapter 19.
Chapter 19 Review “Acids, Bases, and Salts”
Brønsted-Lowry Acids and Bases
Acids and Bases.
Acids Bases.
Acids and bases.
Acids and Bases Pg. 119.
Acids and Bases Mr. Sonaji V. Gayakwad Asst. professor
Acids and Bases.
Acids and Bases Chapter 19.
Acids and Bases.
Prentice-Hall Chapter 19.1 Dr. Yager
Arrhenius Acids and Bases
Created by C. Ippolito July 2007
A. Acids and Bases The Arrhenius Model
Acids and Bases.
ACIDS and BASES Chapter 19
Acids and Bases.
Acids and Bases Chemistry Chapter 18.
LET’S PLAY JEOPARDY!!.
Acids, Bases, Salts An introduction.
Chapter 15 Preview Multiple Choice Short Answer Extended Response
Chapter 19 Review “Acids, Bases, and Salts”
Acids & Bases.
To learn about two models of acids and bases
Acid/Base Review Honors Chemistry.
Objectives To learn about two models of acids and bases
Acid & Bases Review Notes
Acids Bases.
Intro to Acids & Bases.
Chapter 10 Acids, Bases, and Salts
Chapter 14 Preview Lesson Starter Objectives Acids Bases
Acids Give foods a sour or tart taste
Acids & Bases Vocabulary.
Acids & Bases Chapters 20 & 21.
Chapter 19: Acids & Bases.
Acids & Bases.
Acids & Bases.
Acids and Bases Acids Bases Sour Taste React with metal to form H2.
Unit 12: Acids, Bases, and Salts
Acids and Bases Chapters 14 and 15.
Chapter 14 Preview Lesson Starter Objectives
Intro to Acids & Bases.
Descriptions & Reactions
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 19 Acids and Bases

Lesson 7 Characteristics, Theories and Acid Base Pairs

Theories.. Theory Description Arrhenius Acids- Hydrogen containing compounds that ionize to form H+ ions in aqueous solutions. Bases- Hydroxide containing compounds that ionize to for OH- ions in aqueous solutions. Bronsted-Lowry Acid- H+ ion donor NH3 + H2O  NH4+ + OH- Base- H+ ion acceptor H2SO4 + H2O  H3O+ + HSO4- Amphoteric*** Hydronium**** Acid Conjugate Base Pairs** Lewis Acids- electron pair acceptor (H+ needs a pair of electrons to be stable) Bases- electron pair donor (OH- Oxygen has a pair of electrons to share)

Acid-Conjugate Base pairs

Obj. 3 Illustrate the reaction between HCl and water and Label the Acid- Conjugate Base Pair. (more practice on page 625 and handout)

Lesson 8 Self ionization of water and Kw Water molecules produce ions H2O  H+ + OH-

Answer the 4 inference problems on your notes…

Practice Problems on page 596

Lesson 9 pH and pOH

Describe pH. What does it measure. What is the equation Describe pH. What does it measure? What is the equation? What is the relationship between pH and H+ ions.

Describe pOH. What does it measure. What is the equation Describe pOH. What does it measure? What is the equation? What is the relationship between pOH and OH- ions.

Obj. 8 Solve the pH and pOH problems…

Lesson 10 Indicators and Titrations

Titrations- to determine the unknown Molarity of an acid or a base with a controlled neutralization reaction and a known concentration solution. Neutralization reaction- acid and base react and form a SALT and water Salts are anions from acids and cations from bases HCl + NaOH  NaCl + H2O M1V1=M2V2 (for monoprotic acids) N1V1=N2V2 Tools used for titration:

Practice Problems for Titrations