Title: Acids and Bases
1Acids and Bases
2When we think of acids and bases we tend to think
of chemistry lab acids and bases like
But we are surrounded by acids and bases in the
world. Most of them are weak.
Acids cause lemons to be sour Acid rain to eat
away at sculptures Eat cavities in your
teeth Digest food in your stomach
3Acids and Bases
What is an Acid and a Base?
- Properties of an Acid
- Tastes sour
- Turns litmus paper red
- Has a pH of less than 7
- Lemon juice and vinegar are good examples.
- Properties of a Base
- Turns litmus paper blue
- Has a pH greater than 7
- Taste bitter and have a slippery feel
- Most hand soaps and drain cleaners are bases
4ACID pH is less than 7 BASE pH is more than
7 NEUTRAL pH 7
5Strenuous exercise causes a buildup of lactic
acid in muscle tissue
Tea contains tannic acid
Fruit contains citric acid
Carbonated soft drinks contain carbonic acid and
phosphoric acid
Acid rain (nitric /sulfuric acid corroding a
limestone sculpture.
6So what happens when an acid and base mix??
- NEUTRALIZATION REACTION!
- Acid Base ? Water Salt
- i.e.) Vinegar Baking Soda ? Water Salt
Carbon dioxide -
- Think of the VOLCANO you made in
elementary school
7Another Neutralization Reaction (Alka Seltzer)
- ALKA SELTZER made of citric acid and baking
soda. - When the tablet hits water, the water acts as a
solvent converting the two formerly solid
reagents into liquids allowing them to react. - Reaction
- Citric Acid Baking Soda ? Water Sodium
citrate (salt) CO2 - C6H8O7 NaHCO3 ? H2O Na3C6H5O7 CO2
-
8ACID DEPOSITION
- Air pollutants (such as sulfur dioxide and
nitrogen dioxide) can combine with water to form
acid precipitation (rainwater that has become
more acidic) - Acid deposition is the more general term we use
to describe this phenomena - Air pollutants can come from both natural and
human sources (volcanoes, forest fires, cars,
factories)
9Now its your turn
- Use the ACID DEPOSITION handout youve been given
and pg. 64-65 of your text to fill in the
diagrams of acid deposition. - When you are finished, complete the following
questions pg. 65 1-3
10Acids and Bases in the ENVIRONMENT
- Due to air pollution, acid rain has caused some
lakes in Canada to become acidic. - Natural limestone (CaCO3) is a base used in to
neutralize lakes. This technique is called
liming. - The calcium carbonate neutralizes the acidic
water, thus raising the pH of the lake water.
11So what were the bad air pollutants that cause
acid rain?
- Nitrogen oxide and sulfur dioxide
- The best way to reduce acid rain is to prevent it
from even forming. - So how do we reduce the amount of NO2 and SO2 in
the air? - REMOVE THE SULFUR
12How do you remove sulfur?
13Sweet Natural Gas
- This sulfur has been removed from sour natural
gas before it is sent to consumers. - Since sulfur emissions are one of the main causes
of acid precipitation, removing the sulfur from
the fuel before burning it will reduce acid
precipitation
14Scrubbing
- Some coal also contains sulfur. When this coal
is burned, the sulfurous emissions can return to
Earth as acid precipitation. - To help prevent this, a device known as a
scrubber is installed on the smokestacks of many
industrial plants that burn coal.
15- Turn to pg. 68, and in the space below draw
Figure 4.8 and describe how a scrubber removes
sulfur.
16Corrosion of Iron
17CORROSION
- Corrosion refers to any process that chemically
breaks down or degrades metal. - The best known type of corrosion is the rusting
of iron. - Most metals will rust, but the corrosion of iron
is a serious problem as this metal is widely
used. - As rust flakes off an iron structure, more metal
is exposed to the environment. This weakens the
structure over time and can make the structure
unsafe.
184Fe(s) 3O2(g) ? 2Fe2O3(s)
- What type of reaction is above?
- (composition, decomposition, combustion or
neutralization) - COMPOSITION
- Element Element ? Compound
- Although it is not included in the chemical
equation, water is also required for rusting to
occur.
19Solving the Problem of Corrosion
- The rusting of the steel used to reinforce
concrete buildings or bridges or pipelines can
cause these structures to fail. - Repairing or replacing these structures costs
millions of dollars - So how do you prevent rusting?
20- 1) Painting this provides metals with a
protective coating of paint. - Painting over metal prevents oxygen and water
from reaching the surface of the metal. This
explains why steel beams are often painted red or
green. - However, once the paint chips off, water and
oxygen are free to attack the steel, and rust
blisters grow rapidly.
21- 2) Galvanizing
- Galvanization is a process of applying a zinc
coating to iron or steel. This involves
immersing the metal in a bath containing molten
zinc. - This process coats the metal with a layer of
zinc that provides a protective barrier between
the metal and the environment. - The galvanized coating resists chipping and
cracking.
22- 3) Sacrificial Metal
- Underground oil pipelines have bars of a second
metal, such as magnesium, buried with the
pipeline. - The magnesium will corrode but the pipeline will
not. In this case, the magnesium is sacrificed
in order to protect the pipeline. - It is much easier and cheaper to replace bars of
magnesium rather than repair a ruptured pipeline