Title: Acid-Base Equilibria
1Acid-Base Equilibria
Mar. 23
- The reaction of weak acids with water,
- OR
- the reaction of weak bases with water,
- always results in an equilibrium!!
- The equilibrium constant for the reaction of a
weak acid with water is Ka
2Acid-Base Equilibria
Mar. 23
H3O(aq) F-(aq)
Keq ?
3Acid-Base Equilibria
Mar. 23
- For any weak acid
- Why is H2O(l) omitted from the Ka expression?
4Acid-Base Equilibria
Mar. 23
- the equilibrium constant for the reaction of a
weak base with water is Kb - HS-(aq) H2O(l) º
- Kb
H2S(aq) OH-(aq)
5Acid-Base Equilibria
Mar. 23
6Mar. 23
- eg.
- Write the expression for Kb for S2-(aq)
- ANSWER
- S2-(aq) H2O(l) º
Worksheet 5
HS-(aq) OH-(aq)
75.a) Use Ka to find H3O for 0.100 mol/L
HF(aq)
Mar. 24
HF(aq) H2O(l) º H3O(aq) F-(aq)
Ka 6.6 x 10-4
8Mar. 24
1st try - Ignore x
x 2 (0.100)(6.6 x 10-4) x 2 6.6 x 10-5 x
8.1 x 10-3 mol/L
9Mar. 24
2nd try Include x
x 2 (0.0919)(6.6 x 10-4) x 2 6.0654 x 10-5 x
7.8 x 10-3 mol/L
Different than 1st try CANNOT IGNORE DISSOCIATION
10Mar. 24
3rd try Include new x
x 2 (0.0922)(6.6 x 10-4) x 2 6.0852 x 10-5 x
7.8 x 10-3 mol/L H3O 7.8 x 10-3 mol/L
Same as 2nd try
115.b) find H3O for 0.250 mol/L CH3COOH(aq
Mar. 24
CH3COOH(aq) H2O(l) º H3O(aq) CH3COO-(aq)
Ka 1.8 x 10-5
12Mar. 24
1st try - Ignore x
x 2 (0.250)(1.8 x 10-5) x 2 4.5 x 10-6 x
2.1 x 10-3 mol/L
13Mar. 24
2nd try Include x
x 2 (0.2479)(1.8 x 10-5) x 2 4.462 x 10-6 x
2.1 x 10-3 mol/L H3O 2.1 x 10-3 mol/L
Same as 1st try
14Mar. 24
To ignore OR not to ignore that is the question
15pH of a weak acid
Mar. 24
- Step 1 Write a balanced equation
- Step 2 ICE table OR assign variables
- Step 3 Write the Ka expression
- Step 4 Check (can we ignore dissociation)
- Step 5 Substitute into Ka expression to find
H3O
16pH of a weak acid
Mar. 24
- eg. Find pH of 0.100 mol/L HF(aq).
- Step 1 Write a balanced equation
- HF(aq) H2O(l) º H3O(aq) F-(aq)
17Step 2 Equilibrium Concentrations
Mar. 24
Let x H3O at equilibrium F- x HF
0.100 - x
18Step 3 Write the Ka expression
Mar. 24
19Step 4 Check (can we ignore dissociation)
Mar. 24
dissociation (- x) may be IGNORED
151
Acid dissociation CANNOT be IGNORED in this
question.
We have to use the x
20Step 5 Substitute into Ka expression
Quadratic Formula!!
x2 6.6 x 10-5 - 6.6 x 10-4 x
x2 6.6 x 10-4 x - 6.6 x 10-5 0
a 1 b 6.6 x 10-4 c -6.6 x 10-5
21Ignore negative roots
22Mar. 29
Try these
- a) Find the H3O in 0.250 mol/L HCN(aq)
- Check 4.0 x 108
- x 1.24 x 10-5
- H3O 1.24 x 10-5
- b) Calculate the pH of 0.0300 mol/L HCOOH(aq)
- Check 167
- x 2.24 x 10-3
- pH 2.651
23Mar. 29
- HCN H2O ? H3O CN-
- Let x H3O
- x CN-
- 0.250 x HCN
- Check
4.0 x 108
Quadratic NOT needed
24Mar. 29
x2 1.55 x 10-10
x 1.25 x 10-5 pH 4.904
25Mar. 29
- HCOOH H2O ? H3O HCOO-
- 0.0300 0 0
- -x x x
- 0.0300 x x x
- Check
Quadratic needed
167
26Mar. 29
x2 5.4 x 10-6 - 1.8 x 10-4x x2 1.8 x
10-4x - 5.4 x 10-6 0
A 1 B 1.8 x 10-4 C -5.4 x 10-6
x 2.24 x 10-3 pH 2.651
27Practice
Mar. 29
- Formic acid, HCOOH, is present in the sting of
certain ants. What is the H3O of a 0.025
mol/L solution of formic acid? (0.00203 mol/L) - Calculate the pH of a sample of vinegar that
contains 0.83 mol/L acetic acid. - ( H3O 3.87 x 10-3 pH 2.413 )
- What is the percent dissociation of the vinegar
in 2.? - diss 0.466
28Practice
Mar. 29
Worksheet 6
- A solution of hydrofluoric acid has a molar
concentration of 0.0100 mol/L. What is the pH of
this solution? - ( H3O 0.00226 pH 2.646 )
- The word butter comes from the Greek butyros.
Butanoic acid, C3H7COOH, gives rancid butter its
distinctive odour. Calculate the H3O of a 1.0
10-2 mol/L solution of butanoic acid. - (Ka 1.51 10-5 ) (Ans 3.89 x 10-4
mol/L)
29pH of a weak base
Apr. 1
- same method as acids
- ignore dissociation if
- to calculate Kb (usually given on the exam)
30pH of a weak base
Apr. 1
- Calculate the pH of 0.0100mol/L Na2CO3(aq)
31Apr. 1
- CO32- H2O ? HCO3- OH-
- 0.0100 0 0
- -x x x
- 0.0100 x x x
- Check
2.13 x 10-4
47
? Quadratic needed
32Apr. 1
x2 2.13 x 10-6 - 2.13 x 10-4x x2 2.13 x
10-4x - 2.13 x 10-6 0
A 1 B 2.13 x 10-4 C -2.13 x 10-6 x
1.36 x 10-3 OH- 1.36 x 10-3 mol/L pOH
?? pH 11.13
33pH of a weak base
Apr. 1
- Calculate the pH of 0.500 mol/L NaNO2(aq)
Worksheet 7
34Apr. 1
- NO2- H2O ? HNO2 OH-
- 0.500 0 0
- -x x x
- 0.500 x x x
- Check
1.39 x 10-11
3.6 x 1010
OK to ignore x here ie. NO Quadratic
35Apr. 1
x2 6.95 x 10-12
x 2.6 x 10-6
OH- 2.6 x 10-6 mol/L pOH ?? pH 8.42
36Calculating Ka from weak acid and pH
- eg. The pH of a 0.072 mol/L solution of benzoic
acid, C6H5COOH, is 2.68. Calculate the numerical
value of the Ka for this acid. - Equation
- Find H3O from pH
- Subtract from weak acid
- Substitute to find Ka
Apr. 1
See p. 591 6 8
37C6H5COOH(aq) H2O(l) º H3O(aq)
C6H5COO-(aq)
Apr. 1
H3O 10-2.68 0.00209 mol/L
C6H5COO- 0.00209 mol/L
C6H5COOH 0.072 0.00209 0.06991 mol/L
Find Ka
6.2 x 10-5
38Calculating Ka from weak acid and pH
- eg. The pH of a 0.072 mol/L solution of benzoic
acid, C6H5COOH, is 2.68. Calculate the
dissociation for this acid.
Apr. 1
H3O 10-2.68 0.00209 mol/L
See p. 591 s 5 6
2.9
39Apr. 1
Calculate the acid dissociation constant, Ka ,
and the percent dissociation for each acid
- a) 0.250 mol/L chlorous acid, HClO2(aq) pH
1.31 - 0.012 19.5
- b) 0.150 mol/L cyanic acid, HCNO(aq) pH 2.15
- 0.000035 4.7
- c) 0.100 mol/L arsenic acid, H3AsO4(aq) pH
1.70 - 0.0050 20
- 0.500 mol/L iodic acid, HIO3(aq) pH 0.670
- 0.160 42.8
40Apr. 1
- More Practice
- Weak Acids
- pp. 591, 592 s 6 -8
- Weak Bases
- p. 595 s 11 - 16 (Kbs on p. 592)
Worksheet 8
41Acid-Base Stoichiometry
Apr. 4
- Solution Stoichiometry (Review)
- Write a balanced equation
- Calculate moles given ( OR n CV)
- Mole ratios
- Calculate required quantity
- OR OR m nM
-
42- eg. 25.0 mL of 0.100 mol/L H2SO4(aq) was used to
neutralize 36.5 mL of NaOH(aq). Calculate the
molar concentration of the NaOH solution.
Apr. 4
H2SO4(aq) NaOH(aq)
? H2O(l) Na2SO4(aq)
2
2
nH2SO4
nNaOH
CNaOH
43Acid-Base Stoichiometry
Apr. 4
- pp. 600, 601 Sample Problems
- p. 602 s 17 - 20
Worksheet 9
44- Acids Bases 9 answers
- 0.210 mol/L
- a) 22.5 mL
- b) 24.7 mL
- c) 4.8 mL
- 31.5 mL
- a) 0.0992 mol/L
- b) 0.269 mol/L
- c) 0.552 mol/L
45- Dilution
- Given 3 of the four variables
- Only one solution
- CiVi CfVf
- Stoichiometry
- Given 3 of the four variables
- Two different solutions
- 4 step method
Apr. 6
46Excess Acid or Base
Apr. 6
- To calculate the pH of a solution produced by
mixing an acid with a base - write the B-L equation (NIE)
- calculate the moles of H3O and OH-
- subtract to determine the moles of excess H3O or
OH- - divide by total volume to get concentration
- calculate pH
47Apr. 6
- eg. 20.0 mL of 0.0100 M Ca(OH)2(aq) is mixed with
10.0 mL of 0.00500 M HCl(aq). - Determine the pH of the resulting solution.
- ANSWER
- Species present
- Ca2 OH- H3O Cl- H2O
SB
SA
48 NIE OH- H3O ? 2 H2O
Apr. 6
C 0.00500 mol/L V 0.0100 L
C 0.0200 mol/L V 0.0200 L
4.00 x 10-4 mol OH- 5.0 x 10-5 mol
H3O 3.5 x 10-4 mol excess OH-
49- 0.01167 mol/L
- OH- 0.01167 mol/L
- pOH 1.933
- pH 12.067
Apr. 6
Worksheet 10
50Acids Bases 10 answers
Apr. 6
1. pH 13.000 2. H3O 4.12 x 10-2
mol/L OH- 2.43 x 10-13 mol/L 3. pH
13.125 4. pH 7 p. 586 s 1 4
51Indicators
Apr. 7
- An indicator is a weak acid that changes color
with changes in pH - HIn is the general formula for an indicator
- To choose an indicator for a titration, the pH of
the endpoint must be within the pH range over
which the indicator changes color
52Apr. 7
- HIn(aq) H2O(l) º H3O(aq) In-(aq)
- Colour 1 Colour 2
- HIn is the acid form of the indicator.
- Adding H3O causes colour 1 (LCP)
- Adding OH- removes the H3O causes colour 2
LCP
53Apr. 8
- methyl orange
- HMo(aq) H2O(l) º H3O(aq) Mo-(aq)
- red yellow
- bromothymol blue
- HBb(aq) H2O(l) º H3O(aq) Bb-(aq)
- yellow blue
Your Turn!! p. 23
54Indicators p. 23
- 1.a) HMv H2O(l) º H3O(aq) Mv-(aq)
- b) HBb H2O(l) º H3O(aq) Bb-(aq)
- 2. Indicator pH colour
- thymol blue 3.0 yellow
- methyl red 7.9 yellow
- phenolpthalein 7.1 colourless
- indigocarmine 13.5 yellow
- 3.a) pH range 2.8 4.5
- b) pH range 8.0 8.2
55Acid-Base Titration (p. 603 ? )
- A titration is a lab technique used to determine
an unknown solution concentration. - A standard solution is added to a known volume
of solution until the endpoint of the titration
is reached. - The endpoint occurs when there is a sharp change
in colour - The equivalence point occurs when the moles of
H3O equals the moles of OH-
56Acid-Base Titration
- The colour change is caused by the indicator
added to the titration flask. - An indicator is a chemical that changes color
over a given pH range (See indicator table) - A buret is used to add the standard solution
- standard solution - solution of known
concentration
57Acid-Base Titration
- primary standard - a standard solution which can
be made by direct weighing of a stable chemical. - Data from titrations allows us to calculate an
unknown solution concentration. -
58Titration Calculation
Omit first trial OVERSHOT the endpoint
- eg. Clem Student performed a titration by adding
0.250 mol/L HCl(aq) to 10.0 mL samples of
Ca(OH)2(aq). Use the data below to determine the
molar concentration of Ca(OH)2(aq). - Trial 1 2 3 4
- Final volume 8.48 mL 15.70 mL 22.91
mL 30.14 mL - Initial volume 1.05 mL 8.48 mL 15.70
mL 22.91 mL - Volume HCl(aq)
- used
7.43 mL
7.23 mL
7.21 mL
7.22 mL
59- Equation
- 2 HCl(aq) Ca(OH)2(aq) ? CaCl2(aq) 2
H2O(l) -
- nHCl
- nCa(OH)2
- C
C 0.250 mol/L Vave 0.00722 L
C ? mol/L V 0.0100 L
60Acid-Base Titration
- Titration Lab pp. 606, 607
-
Worksheet 11
61Multi-Step Titrations (p. 609 - 611)
Apr. 12
- Polyprotic acids donate their protons one at a
time when reacted with a base. - eg. Write the equations for the steps that occur
when H3PO4(aq) is titrated with NaOH(aq) - H3PO4(aq) OH-(aq)
- H2PO4-(aq) OH-(aq)
- HPO42-(aq) OH-(aq)
62Multi-Step Titrations
Apr. 12
- H3PO4(aq) OH-(aq) ? H2PO4-(aq) H2O(l)
- H2PO4-(aq) OH-(aq) ? HPO42-(aq) H2O(l)
- HPO42-(aq) OH-(aq) º PO43-(aq) H2O(l)
- H3PO4(aq) 3 OH-(aq) º PO43-(aq) 3 H2O(l)
63Multi-Step Titrations
Apr. 12
- Write the balanced net ionic equations, and the
overall equation, for the titration of Na2S(aq)
with HCl(aq). - p. 611 s 21.b), 22, 23
-
- LAST TOPIC!! Titration Curves
64Acids and Bases
- Properties / Operational Definitions
- Acid-Base Theories and Limitations
- Arrhenius H-X and X-OH
- Modified react with water ? hydronium
- BLT proton donor/acceptor (CA and CB)
- Writing Net Ionic Equations (BLT)
- Strong vs. Weak
- pH pOH calculations
- Equilibria (Kw, Ka, Kb)
- Titrations/Indicators/Titration Curves
- Dilutions and Excess Reagent questions
65Step 2 ICE table
0.100 mol/L 0 0
-x x x
0.100 - x x x
660.0100mol/L CO23-(aq)
- CO32-(aq) H2O(l) º HCO3-(aq) OH-(aq)
PO43- HPO42-
OH- I C E
0.0100 mol/L 0 0
-x x x
0.0100 - x x x
67Acid-Base Stoichiometry
- Solution stoichiometry (4 question sheet)
- Excess reagent problems (use NIE)
- Titrations
- Titration curves
- Indicators
- STSE Acids Around Us
68- A primary standard is a pure substance that is
stable enough to be stored indefinitely without
decomposition, can be weighed accurately without
special precautions when exposed to air, and will
undergo an accurate stoichiometric reaction in a
titration.
6915. pH of 0.297 mol/L HOCl
- HOCl(aq) H2O(l) º H3O(aq) OCl-(aq)
- Let x H3O at equilibrium
- OCl- x
- HOCl 0.297 - x
70Check
dissociation (- x) may be IGNORED
X 9.28 x 10-5 pH 4.03
71 16. NIE OH- H3O ? 2 H2O
0.484 mol/L 0.07000 L
0.125 mol/L 0.02500 L
0.03388 mol OH- 0.003125 mol H3O 0.030755
mol excess OH- OH- 0.3237 mol/L pOH
0.490 pH 13.510
72- Ignore dissociation
- OH- 0.0146 mol/L
- diss 2.92
- Vave 10.975 mL
- nNaOH 0.001262 mol
- nH2SO4 0.000631 mol
- C 0.0252 mol/L
- Kb 3.93 x 10-4
- diss 6.27
-
73- c) 2.50 mol/L NaCN(aq) Kb 1.61 x 10-5
- Check 1.5 x 105
- x 6.34 x 10-3
- pOH 2.20 pH 11.80
- d) 0.100 mol/L K2S(aq) Kb 0.0769
- Check 1.3
- x 0.0573
- pOH 1.24 pH 12.76