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Chapter 20 Acids and Bases. Describing Acids and Bases 1.Properties of Acids and Bases Acids Bases Contains H + Contains OH - Turns blue litmus red Turns.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 20 Acids and Bases. Describing Acids and Bases 1.Properties of Acids and Bases Acids Bases Contains H + Contains OH - Turns blue litmus red Turns."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 20 Acids and Bases

2 Describing Acids and Bases 1.Properties of Acids and Bases Acids Bases Contains H + Contains OH - Turns blue litmus red Turns red litmus blue Taste sour Taste bitter Can be electrolytes Can be electrolytes Reacts with bases to Reacts with acids to form water form water

3 2. Quick review of naming acids  Hydrogen ions and acidity 1. Hydrogen Ions from water a. When water molecules lose a hydrogen ion it becomes OH - Anion endingExampleAcid nameExample -ideCl - chlorideHydro- (stem) –ic acid -IteSO 3 -2 (stem)-ous acid -ateSO 4 -2 (stem)-ic acid

4 b. When water molecules gain a hydrogen ion it becomes H 3 O + (called the hydronium ion) 2. Self-ionization a. When two water molecules produce ions b. H 2 O (l) H + (aq) + OH - (aq)

5 c. [H + ] = 1.0 x 10 -7 M d. [OH - ] = 1.0 x 10 -7 M e. When [H + ] and [OH - ] are equal it is a neutral solution f. When they are independent (not equal) [H + ] increases, [OH - ] decreases [H + ] decreases, [OH - ] increases

6 3. Ion-product constant a. k w : product of concentration of H + and OH - in water b. K w = [H + ] [OH - ] = 1.0 x 10 -14 M 2 c. Acidic solution: one where [H + ] is greater than [OH - ] [H + ] > 1.0 x 10 -7 M

7 d. Basic solution: one where [H + ] is less than [OH - ] [H + ] < 1.0 x 10 -7 M e. Basic solution also known as Alkaline solution 4.The pH concept a. Better expressed using the pH scale

8 b. pH + pOH = 14 pH = -log[H + ] pOH = -log[OH - ] c. In a neutral solution [H + ] = 1.0 x 10 -7 M pH = -log (1 x 10 -7 ) = -(log 1 + log 10 -7 ) = -(0.0 + (-7.0)) = 7.0

9 d.

10 e. 5.Example problems: a. What is the pH of a solution with a hydrogen-ion concentration of 1.0 x 10 -10 M?

11 b. The pH of an unknown solution is 6.00. What is its hydrogen-ion concentration? c. What is the pOH of a solution if [OH - ] = 4.0 x 10 -11 M? d. What is [H + ] of a solution if the pH = 3.70?

12 6. Measuring pH a. Acid-base Indicator 1. Indicator (In) is an acid or base that undergoes dissociation in a known pH range 2. Reaction form: HIn (aq) H + (aq) + I n - (aq) Acid form Base form

13 3. Types: pH color Thymol blue 1.2-3.0 red  yellow 8.0-9.5 yellow  blue Bromphenol blue 3.0-4.6 yellow  blue Bromcresol green 3.7-5.3 yellow  blue methyl red 4.2-6.2 red  yellow Alizarin 4.5-6.0 yellow  red Bromthymol blue 6.0-7.5 yellow  blue Phenol red 6.9-8.2 yellow  orange Phenolphthalein 8.0-10.0 colorless  pink

14 alizarin yellow R 8.0 – 12.2 yellow  red 4. Useful at room temperature (25 °C) b. pH meter 1. Useful to make rapid, accurate pH measurements 2. more practical than liquid indicators

15  Acid-Base Theories 1.Arrhenius Acids and Bases a. Acids are hydrogen containing compounds that ionize to yield H + in aq solutions b. Bases are compounds that ionize to yield OH - in aq solutions Acids c. Monoprotic acids have one hydrogen HCl

16 d. Diprotic acids : have two hydrogens H 2 SO 4 e. Triprotic acids: have three hydrogens H 3 PO 4 f. Only very polar bonds will dissociate H δ+ --Cl δ-  H + (aq) + Cl - (aq)

17 g. C-H bonds weakly polar will not dissociate ex. Ethanoic acid (CH 3 COOH):

18 Bases h. NaOH (s)  Na + (aq) + OH - (aq) i. Common bases: KOH, NaOH, Ca(OH) 2, Mg(OH) 2

19 2.Bronsted-Lowery Acids and Bases a. Acid is a hydrogen-ion donor b. Base is a hydrogen-ion acceptor c. Conjugate acid – particle formed when a base gains a hydrogen ion d. Conjugate base- particle that remains when an acid has donated a hydrogen ion

20 e. Conjugate acid-base pair: two substances related by the loss or gain of a single hydrogen bond f. Examples: 1. NH 3 (aq) + H 2 O (l)  NH 4 + (aq) + OH - (aq) acceptor donor (base) (acid) (CA) (CB) 2. HCl (g) + H 2 O (l)  H 3 O + (aq) + Cl - (aq) (acid) (base) (CA) (CB)

21 g. Amphoteric: a substance that can act like both an acid and base

22 Sample problems 1. Classify the following as Brønsted acids, bases or both. a) H 2 O b) OH - c) NH 3 d) NH 4 + 2. What is the conjugate base of the following acids? a) HClO 4 b) NH 4 + c) H 2 O d) HCO 3 - 3. What is the conjugate acid of the following bases? a) CN - b) SO 4 2- c) H 2 O d) HCO 3 -

23 3.Lewis Acids and Bases a. Acid: a substance that accepts a pair of electrons to form a covalent bond b. Base: a substance that donate a pair of electrons to form a covalent bond c. Examples: 1. H + + acid base 2.

24  Strengths of Acids and Bases 1. Strong acids and bases a. Strong acids: completely ionize (dissociate) HCl, HNO 3, H 2 SO 4, HBr, H I, HClO 4 b. Dissociation constant (K a ): the ratio of the concentration of the dissociated form of an acid to the concentration of the undissociated form

25 ***See page 600 Table 20.7 3. Equilibrium-constant expression K = [products] [reactants] ** Remember to raise the concentrations to the coefficient number.

26 4. K a = [H + ][A - ] (Gives the ratio of ions [HA] vs molecules)  Weak acid has K a <1  Leads to small [H + ] and pH of 2-7 5. K b = [BH + ][OH - ] [B]  Weak bases has K b < 1  Leads to small [OH - ] and pH of 12-7 **Do not use water in the [ ]

27 6. Examples: a. Calculate the [OH - ] of a 0.500 M solution of aqueous ammonia. The K b is 1.74 x 10 -5. NH 3 + H 2 O NH 4 + + OH - K b = [NH 4 + ][OH - ] [NH 3 ]

28

29 Step 2: Write the K a expression HC 2 H 3 O + H 2 0 H + + C 2 H 3 O - (HOAc) (OAc - ) K a = [H + ][OAc - ] [HoAc] 1.8 x 10 -5 = (x)(x) = x 2 (1.00 –x) (1.00 – x) This is a quadratic. Solve using the quadratic formula. OR you can make an approximation if x is very small. (Rule of thumb: 10 -5 or smaller is OK)

30 1.8 x 10 -5 = x 2 1.00 x = [H + ] = [OAc -] = 4.2 x 10 -3 M pH = -log[4.2 x 10 -3 ] = 2.37

31 c. You have 0.010 M NH 3. Calculate the pH if the K b = 1.8 x 10 -5. NH 3 + H 2 O  NH 4 + + OH - [NH 3 ] [NH 4 + ] [OH - ] Initial 0.010 0 0 Change -x x x Equilibrium 0.010-x x x

32 K b = [NH 4 + ] [ OH - ] [NH 3 ] 1.8 x 10 -5 = (x)(x) 0.010 – x x = 4.2 x 10 -4 M At equilibrium: 0.010 -4.2 x 10 -4 = 0.00958≈0.01

33 Once you find [OH - ], you find the pOH pH + pOH = 14

34  pH indicators 1. indicator (In) is an acid or base that dissociates in a known pH range HIn (aq) acid form OH -   H + H + (aq) + In - (aq) base form 2.

35 3. Types of indicators a. Methyl red: dye that turns red in acids 0-4.4 : red 4.5-6.1: orange 6.2-above: yellow b. Phenolphthalein: colorless in acids, pink in bases below pH 8.2: colorless above pH 10: pink

36 c. Bromothymol blue: used for weak acids/bases below pH of 6.0 = yellow pH of 7.0 = green above pH of 7.6 = blue d. Universal indicator: used for acids and bases 0-3 3-6 7 8-11 11-14 red orange/ green blue purple yellow

37 Problems with indicators 1. Only work at room temperature (will change colors at different temp) 2. Salts in the solution may change the dissociation process  pH meter: equipment used to measure pH (best pH measurement)


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