Title: Generic Intro to AB chem. (Sect. J)
1Generic Intro to AB chem. (Sect. J)
- Arrhenius theory an acid forms H in water and
a base forms OH in water. - But not all acidbase reactions involve water,
and many bases (NH3, carbonates) do not contain
any OH. - BrønstedLowry theory defines acids and bases in
terms of proton (H) transfer. - A BrønstedLowry acid is a proton donor.
- A BrønstedLowry base is a proton acceptor.
- The conjugate base of an acid is the acid minus
the proton it has donated. - The conjugate acid of a base is the base plus the
accepted proton.
2Examples of Conjugate AB pairs
3Couple of example problems
- Write a balanced chemical equation for the
dissociation of each of the following (in H2O) - H2SO4, H2PO4-,
- What is the conjugate base of each of the
following? - HCO3-, CO32-, OH-, H2PO4-
4Describing strength of Acids/Bases
- Some acids are stronger than othersyou know this
- Where do we draw the line?
- I suppose that depends on what line we draw
- Strong Acids/Bases dissociate COMPLETELY100
- Use an arrow to designate the reaction
- Kc values well above 103
- Weak Acids/Bases dissociate very little (1 or
less) - Use equilibrium arrows
- Kc values well below 10-3
5Ionization of HClstrong/weak acids
H2O is a base in this reaction because it accepts
the H
Conjugate acid of H2O
HCl acts as an acid by donating H to H2O
Conjugate base of HCl
6Ionization of Ammonia
This example also illustrates another Acid/Base
definitionLewis ABs Electron pair
acceptorLewis Acid E pair donorbase.
7Lewis Acid/Base interaction (2)
A couple of things worth noting here. Arrow
indicates movement of electrons! Helpful hint in
Organic C of CO2 electron starved due to pull
of oxygens Illustrates the reaction of an oxide
with water. In this case, formation of an acidic
oxide (most elements on right form acidic
oxides Metal oxides react to form bases
(Na2O?) Amphoteric (goes both ways)
Amphoteric oxides
8Water Is Amphiproticgoes both ways
H2O acts as an acid when it donates H, forming
the conjugate base ___
H2O acts as a base when it accepts H, forming
the conjugate acid ___
Amphiprotic Can act as either an acid or as a
base
9Self-Ionization of Water
- Even pure water conducts some electricity. This
is due to the fact that water self-ionizes
- The equilibrium constant for this process is
called the ion product of water (Kw). - At 25 C, Kw 1.0 x 1014 H3OOH
- This equilibrium constant is very important
because it applies to all aqueous
solutionsacids, bases, salts, and
nonelectrolytesnot just to pure water.
10The pH Scale
- Concentration of H3O can vary over a wide range
in aqueous solution, from about 10 M to about
1014 M. - A more convenient expression for H3O is pH.
- pH log H3O and so H3O 10pH
- The negative logarithm function of pH is so
useful that it has been applied to other species
and constants. - pOH log OH and so OH
10pOH - pKw log Kw
- At 25 C, pKw 14.00
- pKw pH pOH 14.00
11The pH Scale
Since pH is a logarithmic scale, cola drinks (pH
about 2.5) are about ____ times as acidic as
tomatoes (pH about 4.5)
12Strength of Conjugate AcidBase Pairs
- A stronger acid can donate H more readily than a
weaker acid. - The stronger an acid, the weaker is its conjugate
base. - The stronger a base, the weaker is its conjugate
acid. - An acidbase reaction is favored in the direction
from the stronger member to the weaker member of
each conjugate acidbase pair.
13Ka and KbYOUVE SEEN THIS!!
- The equilibrium constant for a Brønsted acid is
represented by Ka, and that for a base is
represented by Kb. - Nothing more than a simple extension of what you
already know!!
H3OCH3COO Ka
CH3COOH
Notice that H2O is not included in either
equilibrium expression.
NH4OH Kb
NH3
14Whats happening in solution?
- A solution of a weak acid or base
- Mostly acid molecules (or ions, like the
phosphate example) - Very small of H, and even SMALLER amounts of
OH - Molecules or ions in ceaseless dynamic equilibrium
15More on the acids
Note the higher values of pKa. Higher values
correspond to weaker acids. pKas more commonly
used for acid strength
16A graphic to relate Ka/weak/strong acids
17Strong Acids
- The strong acidsHCl, HBr, HI, HNO3, H2SO4,
HClO4are considered strong because they ionize
completely in water. - The strong acids all appear above H3O in Table
15.1. - The strong acids are leveled to the same
strengthto that of H3Owhen they are placed in
water.
18Weak acids, and how structure determines relative
strength
- Yesterday morning, we touched on weak acids/bases
- Some stronger than otherswhy?
- Know theyre stronger b/c pKa values differ
- Well cover the following situations for weak
acids - Oxo acids
- Binary Hydrides (not given much love in text)
- Carboxylic Acids (pay attentioncrops up again
next year) - ProblemNo ONE thing useful for predicting
acidity. MUST use all of your knowledge
(structure, trends etc)
19Periodic Trends Binary Hydrides (HnX)
- The greater the tendency for HX (general acid) to
transfer a proton to H2O, the more the forward
reaction is favored and the stronger the acid. - ANY factor that makes it easier for the H to
leave will increase the strength of the acid. - Acid strength is inversely proportional to HX
bond-dissociation energy. Weaker HX bond gt
stronger acid. - Acid strength is directly proportional to anion
radius. Larger X radius gt stronger acid.
20Periodic Trends in Acid Strength
21Strength of Oxoacids
- Acid strength increases with the
electronegativity of the central atom, and with
the number of terminal oxygen atoms.
22Other ways to see this
23Strength of Carboxylic Acids
- Carboxylic acids all have the COOH group in
common. - Differences in acid strength come from
differences in the R group attached to the
carboxyl group. - In general, the more that electronegative atoms
appear in the R group, the stronger is the acid.
24- Select the stronger acid in each pair Problems
like this will obviously be on an exam - (a) nitrous acid, HNO2, and nitric acid, HNO3
- (b) Cl3CCOOH and BrCH2COOH
25Weak BasesAgainnot much love
- We know many common strong bases (MetalOH)
- Weak bases? Not manymostly R3N compounds
- Why? They act as good Lewis Bases (lone pair on
N) - Two main typesR group just a typical organic
group - When R group involves a benzene group.
26Strengths of Amines as Bases
- Aromatic amines are much weaker bases than
aliphatic amines. - This is due in part to the fact that the p
electrons in the benzene ring of an aromatic
molecule are delocalized and can involve the
nitrogen atoms lone-pair electrons in the
resonance hybrid. - As a result, the lone-pair electrons are much
less likely to accept a proton. - Electron-withdrawing groups on the ring further
diminish the basicity of aromatic amines relative
to aniline.
27- Select the weaker base in each pair (Good Primer
for your Organic Class this fall)
28Equilibrium in Solutions of Weak Acids and Weak
Bases
- These calculations are similar to the
equilibrium calculations performed in Chapter 9. - An equation is written for the reversible
reaction. - Data are organized, often in an ICE format.
- Changes that occur in establishing equilibrium
are assessed. - Simplifying assumptions are examined (the 5
rule). - Equilibrium concentrations, equilibrium constant,
etc. are calculated.
29- What is the pH of 0.00200 M ClCH2COOH(aq)?
30Several Textbook sample problems
- What is the pH of 0.500 M NH3(aq)?
- The pH of a 0.164 M aqueous solution of
dimethylamine is 11.98. What are the values of Kb
and pKb? The ionization equation is - (CH3)2NH H2O (CH3)2NH2
OH Kb ? - Dimethylamine
Dimethylammonium ion - A Conceptual Example
- Without doing detailed calculations, indicate
which solution has the greater H3O, 0.030 M
HCl or 0.050 M CH3COOH.