Title: Acids and Bases: Introduction
1Acids and Bases Introduction
2Objectives
- Identify the physical and chemical properties of
acids and bases - Classify solutions as acidic, basic, or neutral
- Compare the Arrhenius and Bronsted-Lowry models
of acids and bases
3Key Terms
- Acidic solutions
- Basic solutions
- Arrhenius model
- Bronsted-Lowry model
- Conjugate acid
- Conjugate base
- Conjugate acid-base pair
- amphoteric
4Properties of Acids and Bases
Acids Bases
Tastes sour Tastes bitter
Turns litmus red Turns litmus blue
React with base to form salt water React with acid to form salt water
Electrolyte Electrolyte
React with metal to form hydrogen gas Feels slippery
5Self-Ionization
- Water molecules can react to form hydronium
(H3O)and hydroxide ions(OH-) - H2O H2O ? H3O OH-
- H2O ? H OH-
- The relative amounts of hydronium ions (also
referred to as hydrogen ions, H) and hydroxide
ions determine whether a solution is acid, base,
or neutral.
6Determining acid, base, neutral
- If hydrogen ions (H)and hydroxide ions (OH-) are
equal in concentration, the solution is neutral - If there are more hydrogen ions (H) than
hydroxide ions (OH-), the solution is acidic - If there are more hydroxide ions (OH-), than
hydrogen (H) ions the solution is basic
7Arrhenius model of acid
- Arrhenius acid a substance that contains
hydrogen and ionizes to produce hydrogen ions in
water. - Example
- HCl (aq) ? H (aq) Cl- (aq)
- HCl H2O ? H3O Cl-
8Arrhenius model of base
- Arrhenius base a substance that contains a
hydroxide group and dissociates to produce a
hydroxide ions in aqueous solution. - Example
- NaOH ? Na OH-
9Arrhenius
- The Arrhenius acid and base model explains many
acids and bases. - However, there are acids and bases that have the
appropriate properties, but do not fit the
Arrhenius model. - ENTER Brønsted-Lowry . . .
10Brønsted-Lowry Acid
- a hydrogen-ion donor
- Example
- HCl H2O ? H3O Cl
- HCl is an acid because it donates a hydrogen ion
to the water. - Of course, it was an acid according to Arrhenius
too. So what is different?
11Brønsted-Lowry Acid
- Example
- NH3 H2O ? NH4 OH-
- Water is the acid here, because it donates a
hydrogen to the ammonia.
12Brønsted-Lowry Base
- a hydrogen ion acceptor
- NH3 H2O ? NH4 OH-
- Ammonia is the base here, because it accepts a
hydrogen from the water.
13Brønsted-Lowry Base
- HCl H2O ? H3O Cl
- Water is the base here because it accepts the
hydrogen ion from HCl.
14Amphoteric
- a substance that can act as a Brønsted-Lowry acid
OR base. - Example water as an acid
- NH3 H2O ? NH4 OH-
- Example water as a base
- HCl H2O ? H3O Cl
15Conjugate acid-base pairs
- Conjugate acid species produced when a bases
accepts a hydrogen ion from an acid - Conjugate base species that results from an
acid donating a hydrogen ion to a base - NH3 H2O ? NH4 OH-
- base acid conj a conj b
- More on page 599
16Monoprotic and Polyprotic Acids(all classes)
- Monoprotic acid acid that produces one hydrogen
ion (HCl). - Polyprotic acid acid that produces more than
one hydrogen ion. - Diprotic acid acid that produces 2 hydrogen
ions (H2SO4) - Triprotic acid acid that produces 3 hydrogen
ions (H3PO4)
17Strengths of Acids and Bases
18Objectives
- Relate the strength of an acid or base to its
degree of ionization - Compare the strength of a weak acid with the
strength of its conjugate base and the strength
of a weak base with the strength of its conjugate
acid - Explain the relationship between the strengths of
acids and bases and the values of their
ionization constants
19Key Terms
- Strong acid
- Weak acid
- Acid ionization constant
- Strong base
- Weak base
- Base ionization constant
20Strengths of Acids
- Strong acid acid that ionizes completely.
- Common examples
- HCl, HNO3, H2SO4
- Others are listed on table 19-1
- HCl ? H Cl -
- HCl H2O ? H3O Cl
21Weak Acid
- Weak acid acid that does not ionizes
completely. - Examples acids other than those memorized as
strong. - HCN ? H CN -
- HCN H2O ? H3O CN -
22Strengths of Bases
- Strong base base that dissociates completely to
the metal ion and hydroxide ion. - Examples Group I II hydroxides
- NaOH(s) ? Na OH-
23Weak Bases
- weak base base that does NOT dissociates
completely to the metal ion and hydroxide ion. - Examples any base other than group I II
hydroxides -
- NH3 H2O ? NH4 OH-
24Weak vs Strong Electrolyte
25Concentration
- Is concentrated the same as strong?
- Is dilute the same as weak?
26- NO
- Concentrated is NOT the same as strong when you
are discussing acids and bases. - Dilute is NOT the same as weak when you are
discussing acids and bases.
27- As you just learned, strong and weak have to do
with ionization or dissociation being complete or
incomplete. - In an earlier chapter, you learned that
concentrated and dilute have to do with the
amount of water added, or molarity of a solution.
28- Hydrochloric acid is ALWAYS a strong acid because
it ionizes completely. - However, it may be concentrated because little to
no water is added. - Or- it may be dilute if a lot of water is added.
- HCl can be a concentrated strong acid or a dilute
strong acid.
29- Ammonia is ALWAYS a weak base because it doesnt
dissociate completely. - However, it may be concentrated because little to
no water is added. - Or- it may be dilute if a lot of water is added.
- Ammonia can be a concentrated weak base or a
dilute weak base.
30Acid ionization constant, Ka
- Just like Keq
- HCN (aq) H2O (l) ? H3O (aq) CN- (aq)
- Ka H3O CN
- HCN
- Mathematically, a large Ka means larger numerator
?more ions - so the larger the Ka , the more the acid ionizes
and the stronger it is.
31Acid ionization constant, Ka
- Table 19-2 page 605
- Polyprotic acids have a Ka for each H
32Base ionization constant, Kb
- Just like Ka
- CH3NH3 (aq) H2O (l) ? CH3NH4 (aq) OH- (aq)
- Kb CH3NH4OH-
- CH3NH3
- Mathematically, a large Kb means larger numerator
?more ions - so the larger the Kb , the more the base ionizes
and the stronger it is.