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Acid-Base Equilibria

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A-B properties of salt solutions for the most part anions are slightly basic ... the stronger the acid Common Base Reactions Strong bases also include hydrides (H ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Acid-Base Equilibria


1
Acid-Base Equilibria
2
Arrhenius
  • acids increase H when dissolved in water
  • acids can be classified as monoprotic, diprotic
    or triprotic
  • bases increase OH- when dissolved in water
  • bases can be classified as monobasic, dibasic, or
    tribasic

3
A-B Strength
  • strong acids bases ionize completely and are
    strong electrolytes
  • 7 acids 8 bases (memorize them!!!)
  • diprotic acids dibasic bases do NOT ionize
    completely, only their first H or OH- ionizes
    completely.
  • Strong acid strong base neutral salt
  • strong A-B are not equilibrium expressions, but
    all other A-B are reversible

4
Bronsted-Lowry A-B
  • restricts definition to H
  • acids donate H
  • bases accept H
  • allows the classification of less traditional A-B
  • conjugate A-B pairs 2 formulas in an equation
    whose formulas differ by a H

5
What is the acid, base, and the conjugates?
  • HClO H2O H3O ClO-
  • CO32- H2O OH- HCO3-

6
Wait, water can go both ways?
  • amphoteric substances can behave as either an
    acid or base depending on what they react with.
  • water and anions with protons (H) attached are
    most common amphoterics

7
Lewis A-B Theory
  • very general definition of A-B using electron
    pairs
  • acid electron pair acceptor
  • base electron pair donor
  • In the following equation, which species acts as
    a Lewis acid and which acts as a base?
  • BF3 NH3 BF3NH3

8
Weak A-B
  • only partially ionize in water and are weak
    electrolytes
  • can be written as equilibrium expressions with a
    Ka or Kb value
  • K value indicates how much the acid or base will
    ionize (high K higher ionization)
  • larger K values indicate a stronger acid or base
  • For di- and tri- protic/basic, there will be 2 K
    values (one for the first ionization and one for
    the second)

9
Autoionization of Water
  • H2O H2O OH- H3O
  • reversible equilibrium where water can donate a
    proton to itself
  • Kw 1.0 x 10-14 at room temp.
  • For any conjugate A-B pair, Kw Ka x Kb
  • What is the Ka value for NH4?

10
Example
  • Is an aqueous solution of Na2HPO4 acidic or basic?

11
pH scale
  • pH -logH
  • works for pH ranges from 2-12 and approximates pH
    outside that window
  • The exponent on the H is an indicator of
    approximate pH.

12
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13
Strong A-B
  • no equilibrium b/c all acid/base ionizes
  • use original acid concentration to calculate pH
  • Calculate the H and pH in a solution of 0.37M
    hydrochloric acid.
  • Calculate the OH- and pH in a 0.58M solution of
    NaOH

14
Weak Acids
  • use RICE to find equilibrium concentrations
  • R HA H2O H3O A-
  • I I 0 0
  • C -x x x
  • E I-x x x
  • b/c Ka for most weak acids is less than 10-3, I-x
    is about equal to I, so Ka x2/I

15
Example
  • What is the pH of a 0.20M solution of acetic acid
    (CH3COOH)?

16
Weak Bases
  • similar calculations as acids (replace H3O with
    OH-)
  • R B H2O OH- HB
  • I I 0 0
  • C -y y y
  • E I-y y y
  • b/c Kb for most weak bases is less than 10-3, I-y
    is about equal to I, so Kb y2/I

17
Example
  • What is the pH of a 0.68M solution of aqueous
    ammonia?

18
Classify the following as weak/strong acids/bases
  • chloric acid
  • ammonium chloride
  • calcium hydroxide
  • ethyl amine
  • sodium cyanide

19
Example
  • Measurements show that the pH of a 0.10M solution
    of acetic acid is 2.87. What is the Kb of
    potassium acetate?

20
A-B properties of salt solutions
  • for the most part anions are slightly basic
    (because they attract protons) and cations are
    slightly acidic (because they can donate protons)
  • ions from strong A-B are the only neutral ions
  • To determine if a salt is acidic or basic, look
    at the ions it forms
  • ignore any neutral ions
  • if anion is left, salt is basic
  • if cation is left, salt is acidic
  • if both cation anion are neutral, salt is
    neutral
  • if both cation anion are not neutral, the
    A-B-ness cant be determined from the formula

21
Classify the following salts as acidic, basic, or
neutral
  • NaNO2
  • CH3NH3Cl
  • NaCl
  • MgSO4
  • Al2(SO3)3

22
A-B-ness chemical structure
  • 3 factors affect attraction of electrons (acidity
    increases with stronger attraction of electrons)
  • ionic charge when comparing similar atoms, more
    positive ions are stronger acids
  • oxidation on central atom when comparing
    similar formulas with the same central atom, the
    higher the ox, the stronger the acid
  • electronegativity when comparing similar
    formulas with different central atoms, the higher
    the EN, the stronger the acid

23
Common Base Reactions
  • Strong bases also include hydrides (H-), nitrides
    (N3-), and carbides (C22-)
  • NaH H2O ? H2 Na OH-
  • Mg3N2 6H2O ? 2NH3 3Mg2 6OH-
  • Ca2C2 2H2O ? C2H2 Ca2 2OH-
  • strong bases also include oxides of groups 12
    metals
  • Li2O H2O ? 2Li 2OH-
  • CaO H2O ? Ca2 2OH-

24
Common Acid Reactions
  • nonmetal oxides (aka. acid anhydrides) turn into
    acids when placed in water
  • SO2 H2O H2SO3
  • CO2 H2O H2CO3
  • Cl2O7 H2O ? 2H 2ClO4-
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