Acids and Bases pH, Titration, and Indicators. pH VIII. pH (power of hydrogen or hydronium) - measurement of hydronium concentration A. pH = -log [H 3.

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Presentation transcript:

Acids and Bases pH, Titration, and Indicators

pH VIII. pH (power of hydrogen or hydronium) - measurement of hydronium concentration A. pH = -log [H 3 O + ]; if [H 3 O + ] = 10 -7, then pH = 7 B. High [H 3 O + ] gives low pH (more acidic with low pH C. pOH = -log [OH - ] (power of hydroxide)

pH D. pH Tools to solve problems (MEMORIZE THESE!!) [H 3 O + ][OH - ] = 1 x pH + pOH = 14 pH = -log [H 3 O + ] pOH = -log [OH - ] [H 3 O + ] = 10 -pH (antilog: put -pH in then use INV & log buttons on calculator) [OH - ] = 10 -pOH

pH Wheel pH pOH [OH - ] [H 3 O + ] (or [H + ]) 14-pH 14-pOH 10 -pH -log [H 3 O + ] 10 -pOH -log [OH - ] 1 x [ ]

E. pH Examples: 1. If the pH is 2.3, what is the pOH? pOH = 14 – 2.3 = If the hydronium ion concentration is 2 x M, what is the pH? [H 3 O + ] = - log 2 x M = 3.7

pH Examples (cont) 3. If the hydroxide ion concentration is 3.5 x M, what is the pH? [H 3 O + ] = 1 x = 2.9 x M 3.5 x pH = - log 2.9 x = 8.54 OR: pOH = - log [OH - ] = - log 3.5 x = 5.46 pH = 14 – 5.46 = 8.54

E. pH Examples: (cont) 4. If the pH is 7.4, what are the hydronium and hydroxide ion concentrations? [H 3 O + ] = 10 -pH = = 4 x M [OH - ] = 1 x = 2.5 x M 4 x OR: pOH = = 6.6 [OH - ] = 10 -pOH = = 2.5 x M

pH Scale F. pH scale goes from = strong acid 2-7 = weak acid 7 = neutral 7-12 = weak base = strong base

Indicators Indicators: compounds whose colors are sensitive to pH. A. Color changes as pH changes. B. Weak organic acids whose colors differ from their conjugate base C. HIn + H 2 O → H 3 O + + In - Yellow Red D. Look at pH of color change: called the transition interval See Figure 24 p. 662 (orange for indicator listed above)

Indicators E. Limitations: 1. Solutions must be colorless (or close) 2. Not very precise – relies on eyesight 3. Only good for very narrow pH range

Titration

X. Titration A. Measuring the amount of standard solution (known concentration) that reacts completely with a measured amount of solution of unknown concentration. B. Equivalence point - the point where the two solutions are present in chemically equivalent amounts (H + = OH - ) C. End point - the point where the indicator used changes color D. Indicators: strong acid/strong base: pH 7 bromothymol blue strong acid/weak base: pH 4 methyl red strong base/weak acid: pH 9 phenolphthalein

Titration Titration curves: p. 499 (Draw in notes ) Strong acid/strong base Weak Base/strong acid Weak Acid/strong base

Titration F. Steps: p G. Calculations: Remember that at the equivalence point the moles of H + = moles of OH - (times by #H or OH - ) millimoles of H + = millimoles of OH - 1. Find mmoles of H + by multiplying the following for the acid: vol (ml) x concentration (M) x # of H + in the acid’s formula 2. Find mmoles of OH - by multiplying the following for the base: vol (ml) x concentration (M) x # of OH - in the base’s formula 3. Set them equal to each other and solve for the unknown. (V a )(M a )(#H + ) = (V b )(M b )(#OH - )

Titration Examples H. Examples: 1. If 22.6 ml of Mg (OH) 2 are used to neutralize 30.4 ml of.100 M HCl, what is the concentration of the base? (V a )(M a )(#H + ) = (V b )(M b )(#OH - ) (30.4 ml)(.100 M)(1) = (22.6ml)(X)(2) X = (30.4 ml)(.100 M)(1) (22.6 ml)(2) =.0673 M Mg(OH) 2

Titration Examples 2. How many ml of.400 M NaOH are needed to neutralize 50.0 ml of.200 M HBr? (V a )(M a )(#H + ) = (V b )(M b )(#OH - ) (50.0 ml)(.200 M)(1) = (X)(.400 M)(1) X = (50.0 ml)(.200 M)(1) (.400 M)(1) = 25.0 ml NaOH