Title: Br
1BrønstedLowry Theory
- Brønsted-Lowry Theory of Acids and Bases
- An acidbase reaction is a proton-transfer
reaction in which - the proton is transferred from the acid to the
base. - Acid
- A compound from which a proton can be removed.
- Base
- A compound that can remove a proton.
2BrønstedLowry Theory
3BrønstedLowry Theory
4BrønstedLowry Theory
- Amphoteric
- A substance that can behave as an acid
- in one situation and a base in another.
- Reversible Reaction
- The products of the reaction can react with
themselves - to reproduce the original reactants.
- Forward Direction Left to right
- Reverse Direction Right to left
5BrønstedLowry Theory
6BrønstedLowry Theory
- General equation for a BrønstedLowry
- proton-transfer reaction
- B HA HB
A - base acid
- proton proton
- remover source
7Lewis Theory
- Lewis Theory of Acids and Bases
- Acid
- Electron-pair acceptor.
- Base
- Electron-pair donor.
8Lewis Theory
9AcidBase Theories
- Summary of AcidBase Theories
Theory Acid Definition Base Definition
Historical Sour taste Bitter taste
Arrhenius More H than OH More OH than H
BrønstedLowry Proton source Proton remover
Lewis Electron-pair acceptor Electron-pair donor
10Conjugate AcidBase Pairs
- B HA HB
A - base acid
acid base - proton proton
proton proton - receiver source
source receiver - Conjugate AcidBase Pair
- Two species that transform into each other by
- gain or loss of a proton, H.
- Based on the Brønsted-Lowry theory.
- HB B and HA A are conjugate acidbase pairs
11Conjugate AcidBase Pairs
12Conjugate AcidBase Pairs
13Conjugate AcidBase Pairs
- Example
- What is the conjugate acid of NH3? What are the
conjugate acid and conjugate base of HCO3? - Solution
- To write the formula of a conjugate acid, add one
H. - To write the formula of a conjugate base,
subtract one H. - The conjugate acid of NH3 is NH4.
- The conjugate acid of HCO3 is H2CO3.
- The conjugate base of HCO3 is CO32.
14Acid/Base Relative Strengths
- In Chapter 9, we classified acids as strong or
weak - Strong acids were considered to be completely
ionized - HSt(aq) H(aq) St(aq)
- Weak acids were considered to be completely
un-ionized - HWk(aq)
15Acid/Base Relative Strengths
- Nitric acid is a stronger acid it is a good
proton source. - Consider the ionization equation for nitric acid
- HNO3(aq) H(aq) NO3(aq)
- The conjugate base of the acid is on the
- right-hand side of the equation.
- A base is a proton remover.
16Acid/Base Relative Strengths
- Hydrofluoric acid is a weaker acid it is a poor
proton source. - Consider the ionization equation for hydrofluoric
acid - HF(aq) H(aq) F(aq)
- The conjugate base of the acid is on the
- right-hand side of the equation.
- A base is a proton remover.
17Acid/Base Relative Strengths
18Predicting AcidBase Rxns
- Predicting the Favored Direction of a
- Proton-Transfer Reaction
- The stronger acid will always surrender a proton
- to the stronger base, yielding the weaker
- acid and base as favored species at equilibrium.
19Predicting AcidBase Rxns
- Procedure
- How to Predict the Favored Direction of
- an AcidBase Reaction
- For a given pair of reactants, write the equation
for the transfer of one proton from one species
to the other. (Do not transfer two protons.) - Label the acid and base on each side of the
equation. - Determine which side of the equation has both the
weaker acid and the weaker base (they must both
be on the same side). That side identifies the
products in the favored direction.
20Predicting AcidBase Rxns
- Example
- Write the net ionic equation for the reaction
between hydrogen sulfate ion and hydroxide ion.
Predict which side will be favored at
equilibrium. - Solution
- Step 1 For a given pair of reactants, write the
equation for the transfer of one proton from one
species to the other. (Do not transfer two
protons.) - HSO4(aq) OH(aq) SO42(aq) HOH(l)
21Predicting AcidBase Rxns
- Write the net ionic equation for the reaction
between hydrogen sulfate ion and hydroxide ion.
Predict which side will be favored at
equilibrium. - Step 2 Label the acid and base on each side of
the equation. - HSO4(aq) OH(aq) SO42(aq) HOH(l)
- Acid Base
Base Acid
22Predicting AcidBase Rxns
- Write the net ionic equation for the reaction
between hydrogen sulfate ion and hydroxide ion.
Predict which side will be favored at
equilibrium. - Step 3 Determine which side of the equation has
both the weaker acid and the weaker base (they
must both be on the same side). That side
identifies the products in the favored direction. - HSO4(aq) OH(aq) SO42(aq) HOH(l)
- ? ?
? ? - Acid Base
Base Acid
23Predicting AcidBase Rxns
24Predicting AcidBase Rxns
- Write the net ionic equation for the reaction
between hydrogen sulfate ion and hydroxide ion.
Predict which side will be favored at
equilibrium. - From Table 17.1, HSO4(aq) is a stronger acid
than HOH(l) - SO42(aq) is a weaker base than OH(aq)
- HSO4(aq) OH(aq) SO42(aq) HOH(l)
- Stronger Stronger
Weaker Weaker - Acid Base
Base Acid - The reaction is favored in the forward direction.
25Predicting AcidBase Rxns
26The Water Equilibrium
27The Water Equilibrium
- H2O(l) H(aq) OH(aq)
- Kw H OH 1.0 ? 1014
- Kw is the water constant or equilibrium constant
for water - If H OH x
- Kw H OH 1.0 ? 1014
- H OH 107 moles/liter
28The Water Equilibrium
- For water or water solutions
- If H OH 107 M,
- the solution is neutral.
- If H gt OH,
- the solution is acidic.
- If H lt OH,
- the solution is basic.
29The Water Equilibrium
- Example
- What is the hydrogen ion concentration in a
solution in which the hydroxide ion concentration
is 104 M? Is the solution acidic or basic? - Solution
- GIVEN OH 104 M WANTED H
- EQUATION Kw H OH 1.0 ? 1014
- H 1010 M
- Since H 1010 lt OH 104, the solution
is basic
30pH and pOH (Integer Values)
- A mathematical function is a rule
- that describes how to change one quantity to
another. - The p function
- pQ log Q
- Applied to H and OH,
- pH log H
- pOH log OH
31pH and pOH (Integer Values)
- Inverse Functions
- pH log H
- pH log H
- antilog (pH) antilog (log H)
- antilog (pH) H
- Similarly,
- OH antilog (pOH)
32pH and pOH (Integer Values)
- Example
- What is the pH of a solution with H 105 M?
What is the OH of a solution with pOH 6? - Solution
- pH log H log 105 5
- OH antilog (pOH) antilog (6) 106 M
33pH and pOH (Integer Values)
- Kw H OH 1.0 ? 1014
- H OH 1.0 ? 1014
- log (H OH) log (1.0 ? 1014)
- log (H OH) 14
- log H ( log OH) 14
- pH pOH 14
34pH and pOH (Integer Values)
- Example
- The hydrogen ion concentration of a solution is
103 M. What are the pH, pOH, and OH of the
solution? - Solution
- pH log H log 103 3
- pH pOH 14
- pOH 14 pH 14 3 11
- OH antilog (pOH) antilog (11) 1011 M
35pH and pOH (Integer Values)
- A solution is neutral if H 107 M
- A solution is acidic if H gt 107 M
- A solution is basic if H lt 107 M
- Using pH log H and pOH log OH,
- A solution is neutral if pH 7
- A solution is acidic if pH lt 7
- A solution is basic if pH gt 7
36pH and pOH (integer Values)
37pH and pOH (integer Values)
38Noninteger pH-H/pOH-OH
- Significant Figures and Logarithms
- In a logarithm, the digits to the left of the
decimal are not counted as significant figures.
Counting significant figures in a logarithm
begins at the decimal point.
39Noninteger pH-H/pOH-OH
40Noninteger pH-H/pOH-OH
- Example
- The hydrogen ion concentration of a solution is
2.7 ? 106 M. What are the pH, pOH, and hydroxide
ion concentration? - Solution
- pH log H log (2.7 ? 106) 5.57
- pH pOH 14.00
- pOH 14.00 pH 14.00 5.57 8.43
- OH antilog (pOH) antilog (8.43) 3.7 ?
109 M