Title: Acid and Base Equilibrium
1Acid and Base Equilibrium
2Arrhenius
- Acid A substance that make H (H3O) when
dissolved in water. - Base A substance that makes OH- when dissolved
in water. - An acid/base reaction occurs when and H from an
acid reacts with an OH- from a base.
3Acids
- Strong acids Dissociate completely when
dissolved in water. - HCl, HNO3
- Weak acids only dissociate a little bit.
- CH3CO2H
4Base
- Strong base dissociates completely when
dissolved in water. - NaOH, KOH
- Weak base Makes only a little bit of OH-
- NH3
5Electrolyte
- Electrolyte A substance that produces ions when
dissolved in water. - NaCl, HCl and NaOH are all strong electrolytes
because they dissociate essentially completely
into ions. Strong acids and strong bases are
strong electrolytes. - CH3CO2H, HF and NH3 are examples of weak
electrolytes because they produce only a few ions.
61.00 M Acetic acid, a weak acid
- CH3COOH (aq) H2O(l) ? H3O(aq) CH3COO-(aq)
- The Ka for this reaction is 1.8 x 10-5. Since
little of the CH3CO2H dissociates, we can call it
1 M. - For every H3O there will be one CH3COO-. Let
these concentrations x - xH CH3COO- .00042
7Brønsted-Lowry Definition
- Acid A proton donor.
- Base A proton acceptor.
- An acid base reaction is one where there is a
proton transfer. - A broader definition than the Arrhenius
definition. - conjugate base The acid without an H.
- conjugate acid The base with an H.
8TABLE Relative Strengths of Acids and Their
Conjugate Bases
Given on test
9A standard acid/base reaction
Acid Base ? c. base c. acid
CH3COOH H2O ? CH3COO- H3O
ex
NH3 H2O? NH4 OH-
10More on Acid Base reactions
- Water is amphoteric or amphiprotic, it can act as
both an acid and a base. - All acid base reactions are equilibrium reactions
- The equilibrium lies to the side of the weaker
acid. - When the equilibrium lies to the right, a lot of
reaction occurs and there is often heat released
or there is a color change. - When the equilibrium lies to the left very little
reaction occurs. (no heat)
11Water
- Water auto-ionizes
- H2O H2O ? H3O OH-
- acid base
10-7M 10-7M
12Acids and pH
0.1 M HCl pure water 0.1 M NaOH
H or H3O 0.100 or 1.00 x10-1 1x10-7 1.00 x10-13
OH- 1.00 x10-13 1x10-7 0.100 or 1.00 x10-1
pH 1 7 13
pOH 13 7 1
acid or basic Acid H3OgtOH- neutral H3OOH- Basic H3OltOH-
13pH scale
Lemon juice Soda vinegar
ammonia Comet cleanser drano
14The big six
- H3O OH- 1 x 10-14
- pH -logH3O
- pOH -logOH-
- H3O 10-pH
- OH-10-pOH
- pH pOH 14
15The H or H3O of 0.1 M NH3
- The pH is 11.13. What is the H3O ?
- pH -log H3O
- H3O 10-pH
- H3O 10-11.137.41 x 10-12
16Filling out a table
17Buffer solution
- A buffer solution keeps the pH approximately the
same even upon the addition of a strong acid or
strong base. - Need a weak acid.
- Its conjugate base.
- Present in a large enough quantity to resist the
pH changes.
18CH3CO2H/CH3CO2-
- If you add an acid, H, The base of the buffer
reacts. - H CH3CO2- ? CH3CO2H
- H3O CH3CO2- ? H2O CH3CO2H
- Of you add a base, OH-, the acid of the buffer
system reacts. - CH3CO2H OH- ? H2O CH3CO2-
19Titrations
- How many mL of 0.660M H2SO4 are required to react
completely with 72.5 mL of 0.137M NaOH?