Title: Acids, Bases, and Aqueous Equilibria
1Acids, Bases, and Aqueous Equilibria
2Nature of Acids and Bases
- Acids--
- Sour taste, corrosive to metals
- Bases--
- Bitter taste, feel slippery, corrosive to fat
- Dont use these to identify acids/bases in lab!
3Definitions of Acids and Bases
- Arrhenius Concept Acids produce H in solution,
bases produce OH? ion. - Brønsted-Lowry Acids are H donors, bases are
proton acceptors. - HCl H2O ? Cl? H3O
- acid base
4Conjugate Acid/Base Pairs
- HA(aq) H2O(l) ? H3O(aq) A?(aq)
- conj conj
- acid 1 base 2 acid 2
base 1 - conjugate base everything that remains of the
acid molecule after a proton is lost. - conjugate acid formed when the proton is
transferred to the base.
5Acid Dissociation Constant (Ka)
- An equilibrium exists in water solutions of acids
- HA(aq) H2O(l) ? H3O(aq) A?(aq)
- or HA(aq) ? H (aq) A- (aq)
6Example 14.1
- Give dissociation reactions for these HCl,
HC2H3O2, NH4, C6H5NH3 - HCl ? H Cl-
- HC2H3O2 ? H C2H3O2-
- NH4 ? H NH3
- C6H5NH3 ? H C6H5NH2
7Acid Strength
Strong Acid
- Its equilibrium position lies far to the right.
(HNO3, HCl, HBr, HI, HClO4, H2SO4) Ka gtgt 1
these are the ONLY strong acids - Yields a weak conjugate base. (NO3?, or others
from above acids) - H2SO4 is only strong in its 1st H
8Acid Strength(continued)
Weak Acid
- Its equilibrium lies far to the left. (CH3COOH,
and other organic acids) Ka ltlt 1 - Yields a much stronger (it is relatively strong)
conjugate base than water. (CH3COO?)
9Types of Acids
- Binary Acids Hydrogen bonded to elements other
than oxygen, which has acid characteristics HCl,
HCN, H2S - Oxyacids Hydrogen bonded to a polyatomic ion
containing oxygenH2CO3, H3PO4 - Organic Acidscontain the carboxyl group,
- OH
- -CO which are all weak acids
10Strong Acids
Weak Acids
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Strong
Weak
Weak
Strong
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14Example 14.2
- From the previous slide, arrange these bases from
weak to stronger H2O, F-, Cl-, NO2-, CN- - Cl- is from strong acid, as is H2O (from H3O),
so both are very weak. CN- is from the weakest
acid and is therefore the strongest. HF is a
stonger acid than HNO2, so NO2- is stronger than
F-, so the ranking from weak to strong is - Cl- lt H2O lt F- lt NO2- lt CN-
15Water as an Acid and a Base
- Water is amphoteric (it can behave either as an
acid or a base). - H2O H2O ? H3O OH?
-
conj conj - acid base acid base
- Kw 1 ? 10?14 at 25C H OH-
- Must always be a balance between H and OH-
16Example 14.3
- Calculate H and OH- in these solutions
- a. 1.0 x 10-5 M OH-
- b. 1.0 x 10-7 M OH-
- c. 10.0 M H
- OH- 1.0 x 10-5 M H Kw / OH- 1 x
10-14/ 1.0 x 10-5 1.0 x 10-9 M - OH- 1.0 x 10-7 M H Kw / OH- 1 x
10-14/ 1.0 x 10-7 1.0 x 10-7 M - H 10.0 M OH- Kw / H 1 x
10-14/10.0 1.0 x 10-15 M
17The pH Scale
- There is a more convenient way to indicate H
- pH ? ?logH
- pH in water normally ranges from 0 to 14, but can
extend to negative or gt14 values - Kw 1.00 ? 10?14 H OH?
- pKw 14.00 pH pOH
- As pH rises, pOH falls (sum 14.00).
18Example 14.5
- Calculate pH and pOH for each of these
- solutions a. 1.0 x 10-3 M OH- b. 1.0 M H
- -log OH- 3 pOH pH 14 pOH 11
- b. -log H 0 pH pOH 14 pH 14
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20Example 14.6 7
- If pH of blood is 7.41, find pOH, H, and OH-
- pOH 14-pH 6.59 H 10-pH 10-7.41 3.9 x
10-8 M - OH- 10-6.59 2.6 x 10-7 M
- Calculate pH for 0.10 M HNO3 and 1 x 10-10 M HCl
- Since both are strong acids, they are totally
dissociated, and H acid strength of the
major species. pH of HNO3 is therefore
log(0.10) 1. But the HCl solution is so
dilute that the water provides most of the H,
and so the pH7.
21HOMEWORK 14a
- p. 673ff
- 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 41, 42
22Solving Weak Acid Equilibrium Problems
- List major species in solution.
- Choose species that can produce H and write
reactions. - Based on K values, decide on dominant
equilibrium. - Write equilibrium expression for dominant
equilibrium. - List initial concentrations in dominant
equilibrium. (I)
23Solving Weak Acid Equilibrium Problems (continued)
- Define change at equilibrium (as x). (C)
- Write equilibrium concentrations in terms of x.
(E) - Substitute equilibrium concentrations into
equilibrium expression. - Solve for x the easy way.
- Verify assumptions using 5 rule.
- Calculate H and pH.
24Example 14.8
x2 3.5 x 10-8(0.1) 3.5 x 10-9 x 5.9 x 10-5 M
H pH -log(5.9 x 10-5) 4.23
- Calculate the pH of a 0.100 M solution of HOCl
(Ka3.5 x 10-8) - HOCl H OCl-
- I 0.1 0 0
- C -x x x
- E 0.1-x x x
25Percent Dissociation (Ionization)
Calculate this from H
This becomes greater as the acid concentration
becomes more diluteExample 14.10
26Example 14.10
- Calculate percent dissociation for a. 1.00 M
HC2H3O2 and b. 0.100 M HC2H3O2 Ka 1.8 x
10-5 - Acid H A- b. Acid H
A- - I 1.00 0 0 0.100
0 0 - C -x x x -x
x x - E 1-x x x 0.1-x
x x - 1.8 x 10-5 x2 / 1 1.8 x 10-5 x2 / 0.1
- x H 4.2 x 10-3 M x 1.3 x 10-3 M
- diss 4.2 x 10-3 / 1.0 diss 1.3 x 10-3
/ 0.100 - 0.42 1.3
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28Homework 14b
- p. 675ff
- 55, 59, 60, 63, 64, 68
29Bases
- Strong and weak are used in the same sense
for bases as for acids. - strong complete dissociation (hydroxide ion
supplied to solution) Most common are metal
hydroxides. Kb is very large. - NaOH(s) ? Na(aq) OH?(aq)
30Example 14.12
- Calculate pH of 5.0 x 10-2 M NaOH
- Strong base means OH- NaOH 0.05 M
- pOH -log(0.05) 1.30
- pH 14- pOH 12.70
31Bases(continued)
- weak very little dissociation (or reaction with
water) Usually contain an -NHn group - H3CNH2(aq) H2O(l) ? H3CNH3(aq) OH?(aq)
- Kb for weak bases is usually very small lt 10-3
32Calcualtions Involving Weak Bases
Use the same ICE method as with weak acids Notice
that x will equal OH- rather than
H Calculate pOH and from that calculate pH
33Example 14.13
- Calculate the pH of a 15.0 M solution of NH3
- Kb 1.8 x 10-5 NH3 NH4 OH-
- I 15.0 0 0
- C -x x x
- E 15-x x x
- 1.8 x 10-5 x2 / 15 x2 1.8 x 10-5 (15)2.7 x
10-4 - x 1.6 x 10-2 M OH- pOH 1.80
- pH 14-pOH12.2
34Polyprotic Acids
- . . . can furnish more than one proton (H) to
the solution. Each one comes off separately.
35Acid-Base Properties of Salts
36Relationship of Ka to Kb
- For acidic/basic salts, Ka or Kb must be
calculated from the parent acid/base value - Kb Kw Ka Kw
- Ka Kb
- Example
- Ka of HC2H3O2 1.8 x 10-5
- Kb 1 x 10-14 / 1.8 x 10-5 5.6 x 10-10
37Structure and Acid-Base Properties
- Two factors for acidity in binary compounds
- Bond Polarity (high is good)
- Bond Strength (low is good)
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39Oxides
- Acidic Oxides (Acid Anhydrides)
- O?X bond is strong and covalent.
- SO2, NO2, CrO3
- Basic Oxides (Basic Anhydrides)
- O?X bond is ionic.
- K2O, CaO
40Lewis Acids and Bases
- Lewis Acid electron pair acceptor
- Lewis Base electron pair donor
41Homework 14c
- p. 675ff
- 62, 66, 71, 72, 77, 80, 84, 88, 94
42Buffers, Titrations, and Aqueous Equilibria
43Common Ion Effect
- The shift in equilibrium that occurs because of
the addition of an ion already involved in the
equilibrium reaction. (Le Chateliers principle) - AgCl(s) ? Ag(aq) Cl?(aq)
- This affects the concentrations of other ions,
notably H
44Calculations with ICE
What is the H and ionization of 1.0 M HF
mixed with 1.0 M NaF. (1.0 M HF alone, H2.7 x
10-2, ion2.7) HF(aq) ltgt H (aq) F-
(aq) I 1.0 0 1.0 C -x x x E
1.0-x x 1.0 x Ka 7.2 x 10-4 x
(1.0x) / (1.0 - x) x/1 xH 7.2 x 10-4
ion 7.2 x 10-4 /1.0 .072
45A Buffered Solution
- . . . resists change in its pH when either H or
OH? are added. - 1.0 L of 0.50 M H3CCOOH
- 0.50 M H3CCOONa
- pH 4.74
- Adding 0.010 mol solid NaOH raises the pH of the
solution to 4.76, a very minor change.
46Key Points on Buffered Solutions
- 1. They are weak acids or bases containing a
common ion. - 2. After addition of strong acid or base, deal
with stoichiometry first, then equilibrium.
47Demonstration of Buffer Action
A buffered solution of 1.0 L of 0.5 M HC2H3O2
Ka1.8 x 10-5 and 0.5 M NaC2H3O2 has 0.01 mol of
solid NaOH added. What is the new pH? HC2H3O2
(aq)ltgt C2H3O2-(aq) H (aq) I
0.5 0.5 0 C -x x x E 0.5
-x 0.5 x x Ka1.8 x 10-5 0.5(x) / 0.5
x 1.8 x 10-5 pH 4.74
48When OH- is added, it takes away an equal amount
of H ions, and will affect also the acid
concentration by the same amount. It will also
add to the common ion. HC2H3O2 (aq)ltgt
C2H3O2-(aq) H (aq) I 0.5 0.5 1.8 x
10-5 S -0.01 0.01 - 1.8 x 10-5 due
to adding base I 0.49 0.51 0 C -x x x E
0.49-x 0.51 x x Ka 1.8 x 10-5 x (.51)/ .49
x 1.73 x 10-5 pH 4.76 Practically no
change in pH after base is added.
49Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation
- Useful for calculating pH when the
A?/HA ratios are known.
50Base Buffers With H/H Equation
pOH pKb log ( HB / B ) pKb log
(acid/ base) Base buffers can be calculated
in similar fashion to acid buffers. pH 14 - pOH
51Buffered Solution Characteristics
- Buffers contain relatively large amounts of weak
acid and corresponding base. - Added H reacts to completion with the weak base.
- Added OH? reacts to completion with the weak
acid. - The pH is determined by the ratio of the
concentrations of the weak acid and weak base.
52H/H Calculations
From the previous example, HC2H3O2 .49 M
after the addition of base, and C2H3O2- .51
M. Using the H/H equation, pH pKa log
(.51)/(.49) 4.74 0.02 4.76 same as
using ICE, but easier A weak base buffer is made
with 0.25 M NH3 and 0.40 M NH4Cl. What is the pH
of this buffer? Kb 1.8 x 10-5 NH3 (aq) H2O
(l) ltgt NH4 (aq) OH- (aq) pOH pKb log
(NH4 / NH3) 4.74 log (.40/.25) 4.94 pH
14- 4.94 9.06
53H/H Calculations
The weak base buffer with pH of 9.06 from the
previous example has 0.10 mol of HCl added to it.
What is the new pH? NH3 (aq) H2O (l)
ltgt NH4 (aq) OH- (aq) I .25 .40
1.15 x 10-5 S - .10 .10 - 1.15
x 10-5 due to acid I .15 .50
0 Using H/H, pOH 4.74 log (.5)/(.15)
5.26 pH 14 - 5.26 8.74
54Buffering Capacity
- . . . represents the amount of H or OH? the
buffer can absorb without a significant change in
pH.
55Homework 15a
- p. 741ff 21, 23d, 24d, 37, 38, 43
56Titration (pH) Curve
- A plot of pH of the solution being analyzed as a
function of the amount of titrant added. - Equivalence (stoichiometric) point Enough
titrant has been added to react exactly with the
solution being analyzed.
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58Strong Acid/Base Titration
In titrations, it is easier to calculate
millimoles(mmol), which would be Molarity x mL,
in stoichiometry. What would be the pH of 50.0 mL
of a 0.2 M solution of HCl after 20.0 mL of 0.1 M
NaOH have been added? HCl---50.0 x 0.2 10.0 mmol
NaOH--- 20.0 x 0.1 2.0 mmol H
OH- ----gt H2O volumes must be added I
10mmol 2 mmol 50 20 70 S -2
mmol -2mmol H 8 mmol/ 70 mL 0.11 M
End 8mmol 0 mmol pH 0.95
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60Weak Acid - Strong Base Titration
- Step 1 - A stoichiometry problem - reaction is
assumed to run to completion - then determine
remaining species. - Step 2 - An equilibrium problem - determine
position of weak acid equilibrium and calculate
pH.
61Weak Acid/Strong Base
First do a stoichiometry, then equilibrium using
H/H equation What is the pH of 50.0 mL of a
0.100M HCN solution after 8.00 mL of 0.100 M NaOH
has been added? Ka 6.2 x 10-10 HCN OH-
-----gt H2O CN- Volume I 5 mmol 0.8
mmol 0 mmol 50 8 58 S - 0.8 mmol
-0.8 mmol 0.8 mmol I 4.2 mmol /58mL
0.8 mmol /58 mL 0.072M 0.0138 M pH pKa
log (0.0138/0.072) 8.49
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66Acid-Base Indicator
- . . . marks the end point of a titration by
changing color. - The equivalence point is not necessarily the same
as the end point.
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68pH
15_334
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
Crystal Violet
Cresol Red
Thymol Blue
Erythrosin B
2,4-Dinitrophenol
Bromphenol Blue
Methyl Orange
Bromcresol Green
Methyl Red
Eriochrome Black T
Bromcresol Purple
Alizarin
Bromthymol Blue
Phenol Red
o
-Cresolphthalein
Phenolphthalein
Thymolphthalein
Alizarin Yellow R
The pH ranges shown are approximate. Specific
transition ranges depend on the indicator solvent
chosen.
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70Homework 15b
- p. 741 51, 57, 71 (for 57 only)