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Acids & Bases
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Acids Definition: substances that release hydrogen ions (H+) when mixed in water General formula: HA H is hydrogen A is an anion (non-metal or polyatomic ion) For example: HCl(aq), H2SO4(aq)
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Physical Properties of Acids
Sour tasting (e.g. lemon juice) Wet to the touch when in solution Water soluble Good conductors of electricity, therefore electrolytes
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Chemical Properties of Acids
React with metals to produce hydrogen gas Corrosive Make chemical indicators change colour React with bases to produce neutral solution
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Bases Definition: substances that release hydroxide ions (OH-) when mixed in water, also called alkaline General Formula: BOH OH is the “hydroxide ion” B is a metal (cation) For example: NaOH(aq)
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Physical Properties of Bases
Bitter tasting (e.g. tonic water) Slippery to the touch when in solution Water soluble Good conductors of electricity, therefore electrolytes
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Chemical Properties of Bases
Do not react with metals to produce a gas Corrosive Make chemical indicators change colour React with acids to produce a neutral solution
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Chemical Indicators Are solutions that turn different colours in acids and bases Can be either natural or synthetic
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Chemical Indicators Indicator ACID NEUTRAL BASE Litmus paper
Phenolphthalein Bromthymol blue
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pH Scale A numeric scale used to show how acidic or basic a solution is pH stands for “power of hydrogen”
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The pH Scale Each step on the pH scale is 10 times difference
E.g. a solution with a pH of 3 is 10 times more acidic than a solutions with a pH of 4 E.g. a solution with a pH of 13 is 10 times more basic than a solution with a pH of 12 Practice: How much more acidic is lemon juice (pH 2) than water (pH 7)?
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Neutralization Reactions
A type of double displacement reaction e.g. HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) NaCl(aq) + H2O(l) A salt is an ionic compound produced by the reaction of an acid plus a base
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