Title: Acids and Bases
1Acids and Bases
2Classifying Acids
- Organic acids contain a carboxyl group or
-COOH -- HC2H3O2 citric acid. - Inorganic acids -- HCl, H2SO4, HNO3.
- Oxyacids -- acid proton attached to oxygen
- H3PO4. more oxygen the stronger the acid
- Monoprotic -- HCl HC2H3O2
- Diprotic -- H2SO4 Triprotic
-- H3PO4
3Models of Acids and Bases
- Arrhenius Concept Acids produce H in solution,
bases produce OH? ion. - Brønsted-Lowry Acids are H donors, bases are
proton acceptors. - HCl H2O ? Cl? H3O
- acid base
4Bronsted-Lowry Model
- The Bronsted-Lowry Model is not limited to
aqueous solutions like the Arrhenius Model. - NH3(g) HCl(g) ----gt NH4Cl(s)
- This is an acid-base reaction according to
Bronsted-Lowry, but not according to Arrhenius!
5Hydronium Ion
- Hydronium ion is a hydrated proton -- H.H2O.
- The H ion is simply a proton. It has a very
high charge density, so it strongly is attracted
to the very electronegative oxygen of the polar
water molecule.
6Conjugate Acid/Base Pairs
- HA(aq) H2O(l) ? H3O(aq) A?(aq)
- conj conj conj
conj - acid 1 base 2 acid 2
base 1 - conjugate base everything that remains of the
acid molecule after a proton is lost. - conjugate acid formed when the proton is
transferred to the base. - Which is the stronger base--H2O or A-?
7- HF(aq) OH-(aq) -gt F-(aq) H2O(l)
- HCl OH- ? Cl- H2O
- HCl NH3 ? Cl- NH4
8The relationship of acid strength and conjugate
base strength for acid-base reactions.
9Acid Strength
Strong Acid
- Its equilibrium position lies far to the right.
(HNO3) - Yields a weak conjugate base. (NO3?)
10Acid Strength(continued)
Weak Acid
- Its equilibrium lies far to the left. (CH3COOH)
- Yields a much stronger (water is relatively
strong) conjugate base than water. (CH3COO?)
11Acid Dissociation Constant (Ka)
- HA(aq) H2O(l) ? H3O(aq) A?(aq)
- Ka values for common acids are found in Table
14.2 on page 663.
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13- HCOOH(aq) H20 (l) ? COOH- (aq) H30 (aq)
- HClO4(aq) H20 (l) ? ClO4- (aq) H3O(aq)
14A strong acid is nearly 100 ionized, while a
weak acid is only slightly ionized.
15Diagram a represents a strong acid, while b
represents a weak acid which remains mostly in
the molecular form.
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17Water as an Acid and a Base
- Water is amphoteric (it can behave either as an
acid or a base). - H2O H2O ? H3O OH?
-
conj conj - acid 1 base 2 acid 2 base 1
18Ion product Constant, Kw
- Kw is called the ion-product constant or
dissociation constant. - Kw 1 ? 10?14 M2 at 25C
- neutral solution H OH- 1.0 x 10 -7 M
- acidic solution H gt OH- H gt 1.0 x
10-7 M - basic solution H lt OH- OH- gt 1.0 x
10-7 M - No matter what the concentration of H or OH- in
an aqueous solution, the product, Kw, will remain
the same for that Temp.
19H OH- Calculations
- Calculate the H for a 1.0 x 10-5 M OH-.
- Kw HOH-
- H Kw/OH-
- H 1.0 x 10-14 M2/1.0 x 10-5 M
- H 1.0 x 10-9 M
20H OH- CalculationsContinued
- Calculate the OH- for a 10.0 M H.
- Kw HOH-
- OH- Kw/H
- OH- 1.0 x 10-14 M2/10.0 M
- OH- 1.0 x 10-15 M
21The pH Scale
- pH ?logH
- pH in water usually ranges from 0 to 14.
- Kw 1.00 ? 10?14 H OH?
- pKw 14.00 pH pOH
- As pH rises, pOH falls (sum 14.00).
22pH scale and pH values for common substances. A
pH of 1 is 100 times more acidic than a pH of 3.
23Logarithms
- -log 1.00 x 10-7 7.000
- 7.000
- characteristic mantissa
- The number of significant digits in 1.00 x 10-7
is three, therefore, the log has three decimal
places. The mantissa represents the log of 1.00
and the characteristic represents the exponent 7.
24pH Significant Figures
- decimal places pH -------gt Significant
Figure in H - Significant Figures H -------gt
decimal places pH -
- pH - log H H 10(-pH)
- H 1.0 x 10-5 M pH 5.00
25pH Calculations
- What is the pOH, H, OH- for human blood
with a pH of 7.41? - pH pOH 14.00
- pOH 14.00 - pH
- pOH 14.00 - 7.41
- pOH 6.59
26pH CalculationsContinued
- What is the pOH, H, OH- for human blood
with a pH of 7.41? - pH - log H
- H antilog (-pH)
- H antilog (-7.41)
- H 3.9 x 10-8 M
Note The number of significant figures in the
antilog is equal to the number of decimal places
in the pH.
27pH CalculationsContinued
- What is the pOH, H, OH- for human blood
with a pH of 7.41? - pOH - log OH-
- OH- antilog (-pOH)
- OH- antilog (-6.59)
- OH- 2.6 x 10-7 M
Note The number of significant figures in the
antilog is equal to the number of decimal places
in the pOH.
28 29pH of Strong Acid Solutions
- Calculate the pH of a 0.10 M HNO3 solution.
- Major species are H, NO3-,
- Sources of H are from HNO3 and H2O -- amount
from water is insignificant. - ?H 0.10 M pH - log H
- pH - log
0.10 - pH 1.00
Note The number of significant figures in the
H is the same as the decimal places in the pH.
30- A solution is prepared by adding 15.8g of HCl to
enough water to make a total volume of 400.ml
What is the pH of the solution ?
31Solving Weak Acid Equilibrium Problems
- Write equilibrium expression for dominant
equilibrium. - Use an ice table .
32pH of Weak Acid Solutions
- Calculate the pH of a 0.100 M HOCl solution.
- Ka HOCl 3.5 x 10-8
- Major species HOCl and HOH
- ? HOCl will be only significant source of H.
- Ka 3.5 x 10-8 HOCl-/HOCl
33pH of Weak Acid SolutionsContinued
- ICE
- HOCl OCl-
H - Initial (mol/L) 0.100 0
0 - Change (mol/L) - x x
x - Equil. (mol/L) 0.100 - x 0 x 0 x
34pH of Weak Acid SolutionsContinued
- Ka 3.5 x 10-8 HOCl-/HOCl
- 3.5 x 10-8 xx/0.100 - x
- Ka is more than 100 x smaller than concentration,
x can be neglected in the denominator. - Ka 3.5 x 10-8 xx/0.100
- x2 3.5 x 10-9
- x 5.9 x 10-5 M
35pH of Weak Acid SolutionsContinued
- Approximation check
- dissociation (x/HOClo) (100)
- dissociation (5.9 x 10-5/0.100)(100)
- dissociation 0.059
- This is much less than 5 and therefore the
approximation was valid.
36Percent Dissociation (Ionization)
The percent dissociation calculation is exactly
the same as the one to check the 5
approximation.
37pH of a weak acid practice
- Calculate the Ph of a .500M aqueous solution of
formic acid,HCOOH (Ka1.77x10-4) - Rb324
38pH of a weak acid practice II
- Calculate the pH of a .200 M HCA Solution with a
Ka7.45x10-4 - Rb324-325
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40Bases
- Bases are often called alkalis because they often
contain alkali or alkaline earth metals. - Strong and weak are used in the same sense
for bases as for acids. - strong complete dissociation (hydroxide ion
supplied to solution) - NaOH(s) ? Na(aq) OH?(aq)
41Bases(continued)
- weak very little dissociation (or reaction with
water) - H3CNH2(aq) H2O(l) ? H3CNH3(aq) OH?(aq)
- Kb calculations are identical to Ka calculations.
42- Calculate the pH of a solution made by adding
4.63 g of LiOH into water for a total volume of
400 ml - Calculate the pH of a .350M solution of CH3NH2
(Kb4.38x10-4)
43- What is the pH of a 0.100 M solution of ammonia
(NH3) (Kb 1.8x10-5)?
44Kw Ka x Kb
45- Calculate the pH of a .500M KF solution at 25dc
- Kb for 1.4.0x10-11
- text689
46 47pH of a Salt
- Calculate the pH of a .500M NaNO2 solution at
25dc - (Ka for HNO2 4.0x10-4
- Rb334
48 49Ph of a salt practice acid
- Calculate the pH of a .010M AlCl3 solution .
- Ka Value for Al(H2O6)3 is 1.4x10-5
50- Calculate the pH of a .010M NH4Cl solution .
- Kb Value for NH3 is 5.6x10-10
51 52Polyprotic Acids
- . . . can furnish more than one proton (H) to
the solution.
53- Calculate the pH of a 5.0M H3PO4 solution and the
equilibrium concentrations of H3PO4, H2PO4-,
HPO4-2, PO3-3 - Ka1 7.5 x10-3
- Ka2 6.2 x10-8
- Ka3 4.8 x10-13 Rb 331-332