Title: Acids
1Acids Bases
2Text book
- Section 8.2A
- Sections 16.1 16.2
3Self-ionization of water(Autoionization)
4TruthH2O H2O ? H3O OH-Convenient LieH2O
? H OH-
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6H3O hydronium ionH hydrogen ionOH-
hydroxide ion
7ACID BASE
Taste
Slippery?
Litmus
Phenol-phthalein
8ACID BASE
Taste Sour Bitter
Slippery?
Litmus
Phenol-phthalein
9ACID BASE
Taste Sour Bitter
Slippery? No Yes
Litmus
Phenol-phthalein
10ACID BASE
Taste Sour Bitter
Slippery? No Yes
Litmus Red Blue
Phenol-phthalein
11ACID BASE
Taste Sour Bitter
Slippery? No Yes
Litmus Red Blue
Phenol-phthalein Colorless Red
12P H E N O L P H T H A L E I N
?acid
?base
Page 583
13Acids react with active metals to produce
hydrogen gas. (Page 264)M HA ? MA
H2Example Zn 2 HCl ? ZnCl2 H2(A single
replacement reaction)
14Salt cation plus the anion of an acid
15Acids react with active metals to produce
hydrogen gas.M HA ? MA H2Example Zn 2
HCl ? ZnCl2 H2Ionic Zn 2H ? Zn2 H2
16Acids react with carbonates and hydrogen
carbonates to produce carbon dioxide and water.
(Page 264)
17HA MCO3 ? MA CO2
H2OExample2 HCl CaCO3 ? CaCl2
CO2 H2O
18Whats really happening? 2 HCl CaCO3 ?
CaCl2 H2CO3A double replacement
reaction.
19BUT H2CO3 isnt stable at room temperature and
pressure. It spontaneously decomposesH2CO3 ??
H2O CO2
20So 2 HCl CaCO3 ? CaCl2 CO2 H20
Ionic 2 H CaCO3 ? Ca2
CO2 H20
21HA MHCO3 ? MA CO2 H2O EX
HC2H3O2 NaHCO3? NaC2H3O2 CO2 H2O
Ionic HC2H3O2 HCO3- ? C2H3O2-
CO2 H2O
22Homework
- Predict the products and write complete balanced
reactions. - Mg(s) HBr(aq) ?
- Al(s) HNO3(aq) ?
- H2SO4(aq) K2CO3(aq) ?
- MgCO3(s) HClO4(aq) ?
23ACID BASE
Arrhenius Make H ion in water Make OH- ion in water
H3O to OH-
Bronsted
24ACID BASE
Arrhenius Make H Ion in water Make OH- Ion in water
H3O to OH- H3O gt OH- H3O lt OH-
Bronsted
25ACID BASE
Arrhenius Make H Ion in water Make OH- Ion in water
H3O to OH- H3O gt OH- H3O lt OH-
Bronsted proton (H) donor proton(H) acceptor
26Definitions
- monoprotic can donate one proton (HA, EX HCl)
- diprotic can donate two protons (H2A, EX
H2SO4) - triprotic can donate three protons (H3A, EX
H3PO4) - polyprotic diprotic and triprotic
27Electrolyte formation AcidsTruthHA H2O ?
H3O A-Convenient LieHA ? H A-Ionization
28Electrolyte formation AcidsSee page
563TruthHCl H2O ? H3O Cl-Convenient
LieHCl ? H Cl-Ionization
29Acid Strength
- Strong acids ionize completely.
- Weak acids do not ionize completely.
- See solubility rules for list of strong acids.
- Figure 16.1 on page 567
30Electrolyte formation BaseCation(OH) ? Cation
OH-Ex Ca(OH)2 ? Ca2 2 OH-
(dissociation)
31Electrolyte formation BaseCation(OH) ? Cation
OH-Ex Ca(OH)2 ? Ca2 2 OH-
(dissociation) B H2O ? BH OH-(B base,
BH protonated base)Ex NH3 H2O ? NH4
OH-(ionization)
32Base Strength
- Strong bases are hydroxide compounds that
dissociate completely. - See solubility rules for a list of strong bases.
- Weak bases are other hydroxide compounds (they
dont dissolve significantly into cations and
hydroxide) AND all molecular bases (EX NH3)
33Concentration -v- Strength
- These two concepts have nothing to do with each
other. - An acid/base can be dilute and strong (Ex 0.01M
HCl) - An acid/base can be concentrated and weak (Ex
8M H2SO3)
34Homework
- Page 273, 20 (Truth and
convenient lie) - Page 273, 21
35Arrhenius neutralization acid base ? water
saltHBr NaOH ?H2O NaBrIonic H OH- ?
H2O
36Homework
37BronstedNeutralizationacid base ? protonated
base anionHA B ? BH A-
38BronstedNeutralizationHA B ? BH A-HCl
NH3 ? NH4 Cl- Ionic H NH3 ? NH4
39Bronsted conjugates(Page 563)
- Acid HA
- ? Conjugate base A-
- Base B
- ? Conjugate acid HB
40SoAn acid loses proton to become a conjugate
base (ready to accept a proton)
41And..A base gains a proton to become a
conjugate acid (ready to loose a proton)
42Acid-base reaction
- One substance donates a proton
- One substance accepts a proton
43Page 564
- Example 16.1 16.2
- Practice 16.2
- Homework Page 572, Section Review 1-5
44Relative strength
- See page 567.
- Strong acid ? weak conjugate base
- Weak acid ? strong conjugate base
- Strong base ? weak conjugate acid
- Weak base ? strong conjugate acid
45Homework
46Water can accept or donate a proton(Recall
autoionization.)
47ExamplesHCl H2O ? H3O Cl-NH3 H2O?NH4
OH-
48HCl H2O ? H3O Cl-acid base ca
cbNH3 H2O?NH4 OH-base acid ca
cb
49Lewis definition
- Acid electron pair acceptor
- Base electron pair donor
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51coordinate bonding
- One atom donates both of the electrons in the
covalent bond - A coordination complex is formed.
52coordinate bonding ? coordination complex
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