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HAVE A GREAT BREAK

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Acid= donates a proton (H ) to a base. Base= accepts a proton (H ) from an acid ... Polyprotic acids can donate more than one H Sulfuric acid ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HAVE A GREAT BREAK


1
Announcements
  • HAVE A GREAT BREAK!
  • REMINDER NO LAB

2
Types of Chemical Reactions
  • Chapter 4 Goals
  • To be able to predict chemical reactivity.
  • To know how to synthesize specific compounds.

3
Types of Reactions
  • Acid-Base
  • Oxidation-Reduction
  • Precipitation
  • Gas Forming
  • Organic
  • Substitution
  • Addition
  • Elimination

4
Reactions in Aqueous Solution
  • Aqueous- solvent is water
  • Reactions well discuss today/next week are in
    aqueous solution, unless otherwise noted
  • Acid-Base
  • Redox
  • Precipitation

5
Electrolytes
  • Strong All of the solute comes apart to yield
    ions in solution
  • Dissolution of KMnO4
  • Weak Some of the solute comes apart to yield
    ions
  • Nonelectrolytes No ions formed
  • Lets compare

6
Electrolytes in the Human Body
  • Most important
  • Na, Cl-, K, Ca2, Mg2 ,HCO3-, and PO43-, SO42-
  • Elevated K? cardiac arrythmia
  • Decreased extracellular K? paralysis
  • Excess extracellular Na? fluid retention
  • Decreased plasma Ca2 and Mg2 ? muscle spasms

7
Acids and Bases
  • Theories- theres lots of them
  • Ones well use in this course
  • Lewis (later)
  • Brønsted-Lowry (now)
  • An acid is a substance that donates a proton (H)
    to a base
  • The hydronium ion

8
Brønsted-Lowry Definitions
  • Acid donates a proton (H) to a base
  • Base accepts a proton (H) from an acid
  • Acid base reactions are reversible (almost always)

9
Brønsted-Lowry Definitions
  • Acid donates a proton (H) to a base
  • Base accepts a proton (H) from an acid
  • Acid base reactions are reversible (almost always)

10
Important Acids and Bases
11
Strong Acids
  • 100 of acid molecules produce ions in water
  • Dissociation vs. ionization

12
Weak Acids
  • Only a few acid molecules produce ions (5)
  • Strong vs. Weak acid ionization

13
Polyprotic Acids
  • Polyprotic acids can donate more than one H
  • Sulfuric acid
  • Citric acid (C6H8O7) Not all Hs are acidic

H2SO4 ? H HSO4- HSO4- ? H SO42-
14
Bases
  • Strong bases are hydroxide salts
  • For now, the only important weak base is NH3.

15
If H3PO4 reacts as an acid, which of the
following can it not make?
  • H4PO4
  • H2PO4-
  • HPO42-
  • PO43-

16
If C2O42- (oxalate ion) reacts in an acid-base
reaction, which of the following can it not make?
  • H2C2O4
  • HC2O4-
  • 2 CO2

17
Acid Base Reactions
18
Acid Base Reactions
  • Strong Acid Strong Base
  • HCl(aq) NaOH(aq) ? NaCl(aq) H2O(l) acid
    base salt
    water
  • What do we get if we mix
  • HBr LiOH ?

19
Acid Base Reactions
  • Diprotic acids or bases
  • H2SO4(aq) NaOH(aq) ?
  • H2SO4(aq) Ba(OH)2(aq) ?
  • HCl(aq) Ba(OH)2(aq) ?

20
(No Transcript)
21
Acid-Base Reactions
  • Diprotic Acids or Bases
  • H2SO4(aq) NaOH(aq) ?
  • H2SO4(aq) Ba(OH)2(aq) ?
  • HCl(aq) Ba(OH)2(aq) ?

22
Acid-Base Reactions
  • Strong Acid Weak Base
  • HCl(aq) NH3(aq) ? NH4Cl(aq)

23
Acid-Base Reactions
  • Weak Acid Strong Base
  • HCN(aq) NaOH(aq) ? NaCN(aq) H2O(l) acid
    base salt
    water

24
Net Ionic Equations
  • HCl(aq) NaOH(aq) ? NaCl(aq) H2O(l)
  • What really happens
  • H(aq) OH-(aq) ? H2O(l)
  • Sodium ion and chloride ion are spectator ions

25
Reactions involving weak bases
  • HCl(aq) NH3(aq) ? NH4(aq) Cl-(aq)
  • Net-Ionic Equation
  • NH3(aq) H(aq) ? NH4(aq)

26
CH3CO2H(aq) NaOH(aq) ?
  • 1. CH3CO2H2(aq) NaO(aq)
  • 2. CH3CO2-(aq) H2O(l) Na(aq)
  • 3. CH4(g) CO2(g) H2O(l)

27
HCN(aq) NH3(aq) ?
  • 1. NH4(aq) CN-(aq)
  • 2. H2CN(aq) NH2-(aq)
  • 3. C2N2(s) 3 H2(g)

28
Solution Concentration Molarity
  • Molarity moles solute per liter of solution
  • 0.30 mol NH3 dissolved in 0.500 LConcentration
  • Written like NH3 0.60 M

29
pH Scale
  • In pure water, a few molecules ionize to form
    H3O and OHH2O H2O ? OH H3O
  • In acidic and basic solutions, these
    concentrations are not equalacidic H3O gt
    OHbasic OH gt H3Oneutral H3O
    OH

30
pH Scale
  • Measure how much H3O is in a solution using pH
  • pH lt 7.0 acidic
  • pH gt 7.0 basic
  • pH 7.0 neutral
  • Measure of H3O and OH concentration (moles per
    liter) in a solution
  • As acidity increases, pH decreases

31
pH Scale
  • The pH scale is logarithmic100 102 log(102)
    210 101 log(101) 11 100 log(100)
    00.1 101 log(101) 10.01 102 log(102)
    2
  • pH log H3O
  • pH if H3O 105? 109? Acidic or basic?
  • pH if H3O 0.000057 M?

32
Finding H3O from pH
  • H3O 10-pH
  • What is H3O if pH 8.9?

33
pH Quantitative Measure of Acidity
  • Acidity is related to concentration of H (or
    H3O)
  • pH -logH3O
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