Title: Chapter 14 Acids and Bases
1Chapter 14Acids 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 conjugate conjugate
- base acid
- Proton is transferred from the HCl molecule to
the water molecule.
2Figure 14.1 The Reaction of HCI and H2O
Figure 14.2 The Reaction of an Acid with Water
Figure 14.3 The Reaction of NH3 with HCI to Form
NH4 and CI-
3Conjugate Acid/Base Pairs
- HA(aq) H2O(l) ? H3O(aq) A?(aq)
- conj conj 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. - A conjugate acid-base pair consists of two
substances related to each other by the donating
and accepting of a single proton.
4Acid Dissociation Constant (Ka)
- HA(aq) H2O(l) ? H3O(aq) A?(aq)
-
- Where, Ka is the acid dissociation constant. In
dilute solution we can assume that the
concentration of liquid water remains essentially
constant when an acid is dissolved.
5Acid Strength
- The strength of an acid is defined by the
equilibrium position of its dissociation - (ionization) reaction
- HA(aq) H2O(l) H3O(aq) A-(aq)
-
- Strong Acid
- Its equilibrium position lies far to the right.
(HNO3) - Yields a weak conjugate base. (NO3?)
- Common strong acids are H2SO4, HCl, HNO3, HClO4
6Figure 14.4 Graphic Representation of the
Behavior of Acids of Different Strengths in
Aqueous Solution
7Figure 14.5 Acid Strength Versus Conjugate Base
Strength
8Acid Strength(continued)
- Weak Acid
- Its equilibrium lies far to the left. (CH3COOH)
- Yields a much stronger (it is relatively strong)
conjugate base than water. (CH3COO?) - Common weak acids are H3PO4, HNO2, HOCl, organic
acids (-COOH).
9Figure 14.6 A Strong Acid (a) and a Weak Acid (b)
in Water
10- Monoprotic acid One acidic proton (HCl)
- HCl(aq) H(aq) Cl-(aq)
- Diprotic acid Two acidic protons (H2SO4)
- H2SO4(aq) H(aq) HSO4-(aq)
- HSO4- (aq) H(aq) SO4 2-(aq)
- Oxyacids Acidic proton is attached to an oxygen
atom (H2SO4) - Organic acids Those with a carbon atom
backbone, contain the carboxyl group (-COOH).
CH3-COOH, C6H5-COOH
11Water as an Acid and a Base
- A substance is said to be amphoteric if it can
behave either as an acid or as a base. Water is
amphoteric (it can behave either as an acid or a
base). - H2O H2O ? H3O OH?
-
conj conj - acid 1 base 2 acid 2 base 1
- Kw H3OOH- HOH- 1 ? 10?14 at 25C
- Where, Kw is the ion-product constant or
dissociation constant for water. - H OH- 1.0 x 10-7 M at 25oC in pure
water.
12Figure 14.7 Two Water Molecules React to Form
H3O and OH-
13The pH Scale
- The pH scale provides a convenient way to
represent solution acidity. The pH is a log scale
based on 10. - pH ? ?logH
- pH in water ranges from 0 to 14. The pH
decreases as H increases. - Kw 1.00 ? 10?14 H OH?
- pKw -log Kw 14.00 pH pOH
- As pH rises, pOH falls (sum 14.00).
- pOH -log OH-
14Figure 14.8 The pH Scale and pH Values of Some
Common Substances
15Calculating the pH of Strong Acid Solutions
- Calculate the pH of 1.0 M HCl.
-
- Since HCl is a strong acid, the major species in
solution are H, Cl- and H2O - To calculate the pH we will focus on major
species that can furnish H. The acid is
completely dissociates in water producing H and
water also furnishes H by autoionization by the
equilibrium - H2O(l) H(aq) OH-(aq)
- In pure water at 25oC, H is 10-7M and in
acidic solution even less than that. So the
amount of H contributed by water is negligible
compared with the 1.0M H from the dissociation
of HCl. - pH -log H -log (1.0) 0
16Solving 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.
17Solving Weak Acid Equilibrium Problems (continued)
- Define change at equilibrium (as x).
- Write equilibrium concentrations in terms of x.
- Substitute equilibrium concentrations into
equilibrium expression. - Solve for x the easy way.
- Verify assumptions using 5 rule.
- Calculate H and pH.
18Percent Dissociation (Ionization)
- It is useful to specify the amount of weak acid
that has dissociated in achieving equilibrium in
an aqueous solution. The percent dissociation is
defined as follows - For a given weak acid, the percent dissociation
increases as the acid becomes more dilute.
19Figure 14.10 The Effect of Dilution on the
Percent Dissociation and (H) of a Weak Acid
Solution
20Bases
- Arrhenius concept A base is a substance that
produces OH- ions in aqueous solution. - Bronsted-Lowry concept A base is a proton
acceptor. - Strong and weak are used in the same sense
for bases as for acids. - strong complete dissociation (hydroxide ion
supplied to solution) - NaOH(s) ? Na(aq) OH?(aq)
21Bases(continued)
- weak very little dissociation (or reaction
with water) - H3CNH2(aq) H2O(l) ? H3CNH3(aq) OH?(aq)
- H3CNH2 molecule accepts a proton and thus
functions as a base. Water is the acid in this
reaction. Methyl amine contains no hydroxide ion,
it still increases the concentration of hydroxide
ion to yield a basic solution.
22Polyprotic Acids
- . . . can furnish more than one proton (H) to
the solution. A polyprotic acid always
dissociates in a stepwise manner, one proton at a
time. -
- For a typical weak polyprotic acid,
- Ka1 gt Ka2 gt Ka3
23Acid-Base Properties of Salts
24Structure and Acid-Base Properties
- When a substance is dissolved in water, it
produces an acidic solution if it can donate
protons and produces a basic solution if it can
accept protons. - Two factors for acidity in binary compounds
- Bond Polarity (high is good)
- Bond Strength (low is good)
25Figure 14.11 The Effect of the Number of Attached
Oxygens on the O-H Bond in a Series of of
Chlorine Oxyacids
26Oxides
- Acidic Oxides (Acid Anhydrides) When a covalent
oxide dissolves in water an acidic solution
forms. - O?X bond is strong and covalent.
- SO2, NO2, CO2, CrO3
- Basic Oxides (Basic Anhydrides) When an ionic
oxide dissolves in water a basic solution
results. - O?X bond is ionic.
- K2O, CaO
27Lewis Acids and Bases
- Lewis Acid electron pair acceptor
- Lewis Base electron pair donor
- Lewis acid has an empty atomic orbital that it
can use to accept an electron pair from a
molecule that has a lone pair of electrons. - Lewis Lewis
- acid base
28Figure 14.13 The AI(H2O)63 Ion