Title: Review of Acids, Bases,
1Review of Acids, Bases, Salts
2Arrhenius Acid
- Has H in the formula
- Produces H as the only positive ion in solution
3Formula of an Acid
- Inorganic formula starts with H
- Organic formula ends with COOH
4Properties of Acids
- Sour Taste
- Electrolytes
- React with bases to form a salt H2O
- Turn litmus RED
- React with most metals to produce H2(g)
5Ionization of an Acid
or
HCl H2O ? H3O Cl-
6Arrhenius Base
- Has OH in the formula
- Produces OH- as the only negative ion in solution
7Formula of a Base
- Has format MOH
- M is a metal
8Properties of Bases
- Bitter Taste
- Slippery Feel
- Electrolytes
- React with acids to form a salt H2O
- Turn litmus BLUE
9Ionization of a Base
10Ionization of NH3
11Formula of a Salt
12Write the formula of potasium sulfate
K2SO4
13Electrolytes
- Solutions conduct they contain ions
- Acids (HX), bases (MOH), salts (MX) are
electrolytes
14NONelectrolytes
- Solutions of covalent compounds (all nonmetals).
They do NOT conduct.
15Identify the electrolytes
Yes - B
Yes - B
- LiOH
- CH3COOH
- C6H12O6
- NaNO3
- H2SO4
- CH3OH
- Ca(OH)2
- HCl
- C8H18
- Al(OH)3
- HNO3
- CH3CH2COOH
- K2SO4
- CH3CHOHCH3
- CH3OCH3
- H3PO4
- Mg(OH)2
- CH3CH2OH
Yes - A
Yes - A
Yes - A
No
Yes - S
Yes - S
Yes - A
No
No
No
Yes - A
Yes - B
Yes - A
Yes - B
No
No
16pH scale
- 0-14
- Acidic 0 to 7,
- Neutral 7
- Basic 7-14
17Most acidic on pH scale
18Most basic on pH scale
19OH-
20H
21H3O
- Hydronium ion. Interchangeable with H.
22Acidic Solution
23Basic Solution
24If the pH changes from 3 to 5, how does the H
change?
- The pH changes by 2, so the H changes by 102
or 100X. Since the pH went up, it became LESS
acidic. - The new solution has a H 100 times less than
the original solution.
25How can pH be safely tested?
- Instrumental use pH meter
- Indicators use a series of indicators to narrow
down the pH range - Test acids with metals (NOT Cu, Ag, or Au)
26Bronsted-Lowry Acid
27Bronsted-Lowry Base
28Bronsted-Lowry Acids Bases
29Strong Acids Bases
- Complete or almost complete ionization.
30Weak Acids Bases
- Ionization occurs only to a slight extent, a few
percent.
31Reactions of Acids with Metals
32Zn(s) HCl ? ?
Zn(s) 2HCl ? H2(g) ZnCl2
33Al(s) HCl ? ?
2Al(s) 6HCl ? 3H2(g) 2AlCl3
34Neutralization Reactions
35Net Ionic Equation for Neutralization Reactions
36At neutralization
37Molarity (M)
Liters of soln
38Titration Equation
This equation works when the number of Hs on the
acid EQUALS the number of OHs on the base!
39Titration Equation
This equation works when the number of Hs on the
acid does NOT equal the number of OHs on the
base! na number of acidic Hs in acid. nb
number of OHs in base.
40pH
41pOH
42pOH pH
43OH- X H
44If the H 1 X 10-3
- The pH
- The pOH
- The OH-
3
11
1 X 10-11
45Indicator
- Substance that changes color over a narrow pH
range.
46Molarity H2SO4 Vs. Molarity H
- H2SO4 ? 2H SO42-
- H 2H2SO4
- 2M H2SO4 ? 4M H
47What is the concentration of a hydrochloric acid
solution if 50.0 mL of a 0.250 M KOH solution are
needed to neutralize 20.0 mL of the HCl solution
of unknown concentration?
- MaVa MbVb
- X(20.0 mls) .250M(50.0mls)
48Acid 1.50 M Base ? M
Final Volume 16.07 24.25
Initial Volume 5.45 4.05
Amount Used
10.62 20.20
(1.50 M)(10.62 mls) X(20.20 mls)