Lecture 1 Determination of the Concentration and THE Acid Dissociation Constants of an Unknown Amino Acid.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Bio 98 - Lecture 2 Acid-Base Equilibria, pH and Buffers.
Advertisements

Buffer Calculations for Polyprotic Acids A polyprotic acid can form buffer solutions in presence of its conjugate base. For example, phosphoric acid can.
Titration curves.
Acids and Bases Chapter 19.
Monoprotic Acid-Base Equilibria Monoprotic Weak Acids Monoprotic Weak Bases Fraction of Dissociation-Association Salts of Weak Acids Buffers.
Chapter 18: Equilibria in Solutions of Weak Acids and Bases All weak acids behave the same way in aqueous solution: they partially ionize In terms of the.
Acids and Bases Titrations AP Chemistry. Neutralization Reactions and Titrations Neutralization Reactions Strong acid + Strong Base  Salt + Water HCl.
1 Chapter 17 Principles of Reactivity: Chemistry of Acids and Bases.
Acid – Base Titrations.
Acid-Base Geochemistry Arrhenius’ definition: –Acid  any compound that releases a H + when dissolved in water –Base  any compound that releases an OH.
Chapter 17 ACID-BASE EQUILIBRIA (Part I) 1Dr. Al-Saadi.
Polyprotic Acids & Bases A polyprotic acid can donate more than one H + Carbonic acid: H 2 CO 3 (aq); dissolved CO 2 in water Sulfuric acid: H 2 SO 4 (aq)
Of amino acids and weak acids(acetic acid)
Why is a standardization needed? In order to determine the exact concentration of the amino acid solution, we need to know the exact concentration of.
Author: J R Reid Chapter 5 Volumetric Analysis. CONCEPT OF VOLUMETRIC ANALYSIS The reactants will react with the standard solution from burette of a known.
Reactions in Aqueous Solutions II: Calculations Chapter 11.
Lab 24 - Hydrolysis A salt formed between a strong acid and a weak base is an acid salt. Ammonia is a weak base, and its salt with any strong acid gives.
Chapter 16: Applications of Aqueous Equilibria Renee Y. Becker Valencia Community College 1.
Maths and Chemistry for Biologists. Chemistry 4 Buffers This section of the course covers – buffer solutions and how they work the Henderson-Hasselbalch.
Chapter 10 Acids and Bases.
Acids and Bases Chapter 15. Acids Have a sour taste. Vinegar owes its taste to acetic acid. Citrus fruits contain citric acid. React with certain metals.
 First, notice that the pH where two species concentrations are the same is around the pKa for that equilibrium. In fact, for polyprotic acids with.
Polyprotic Acid-Base Equilibria
Titration Calculations. An example of titration problem: I have a mL sample of a strong acid at an unknown concentration. After adding mL.
Acids and Bases The concept of acidic and basic solutions is perhaps one of the most important topics in chemistry. Acids and bases affect the properties.
1 Example Calculate the volume of 14.8 M NH 3 and the weight of NH 4 Cl (FW = 53.5) you would have to take to prepare 100 mL of a buffer at pH if.
ACIDS AND BASES Acid Base Titration A very accurate method to measure concentration. Acid + Base  Salt + Water H + + OH -  H 2 O Moles H + = Moles.
Updates Assignment 06 is due Mon., March 12 (in class) Midterm 2 is Thurs., March 15 and will cover Chapters 16 & 17 –Huggins 10, 7-8pm –For conflicts:
Acids, Bases, and Salts. Properties of acids Sour (the edible ones, don’t try the others!) React with many metals to form hydrogen (corrosive) Can conduct.
Applications of Aqueous Equilibria Chapter 17 Pg. 719.
Acid-Base Chemistry Arrhenius acid: Substance that dissolves in water and provides H + ions Arrhenius base: Substance that dissolves in water and provides.
Indicators for Acid-Base Titrations (Sec. 9-6). transition range needs to match the endpoint pH as closely as possible in order to minimize titration.
Neutralization of Acids and Bases. Titrations Standard Solution Sample Solutio n Burett e Primary Standard with a precisely known [ ] Unknown [ ] Sample.
Copyright©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Chemistry FIFTH EDITION by Steven S. Zumdahl University of Illinois Chapter 15 Applications.
19.1 Acid-Base Theories> 1 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Day The pH for a 0.10 M solution of a.
AP Chapter 17 Ionic Equilibria of Weak Electrolytes.
Chapter 4 : Classical Methods in Techniques of Analytical Chemistry : Titrimetric Methods of Analysis Pn Syazni Zainul Kamal PPK Bioproses.
CMH 121 Luca Preziati Chapter 8: Acids and Bases Acid = produces H + An acid is a compound that: 1. Has H somewhere 2. Has the tendency (is capable) of.
Titration and pH Curves..   A titration curve is a plot of pH vs. volume of added titrant.
ACIDS and BASES pH indicators pH indicators are valuable tool for determining if a substance is an acid or a base. The indicator will change colors in.
5.3.1 Neutralization reactions Titration Reactions.
Introduction The Equipment The Terms The Process Calculations
1 Titrations (Review) In a titration a solution of accurately known concentration is added gradually added to another solution of unknown concentration.
8 - 1 Titrations An acid-base titration is a volumetric analysis in which a solution of one reactant (acid or base) is gradually added to a solution of.
Strength of Acids Strength of an acid is measured by the extent it reacts with water to form hydronium ions (H 3 O + ). Strong acids ionize ~100% so pH.
Titrations Definition: Volumetric determination of the amount of an acid or base by addition of a standard acid or base until neutralization.
19.1 Acid-Base Theories> 1 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. 1.What can you say about the K a value of a strong.
Arrhenius Theory Acids release hydrogen ions (H + ) Acids release hydrogen ions (H + ) HCl → H + + Cl - HCl → H + + Cl - Bases release hydroxide ions.
Acid equilibria and alpha plots Chemistry 321, Summer 2014.
Acids and Bases Acids taste sour (citric acid, acetic acid) Bases taste bitter (sodium bicarbonate) There are 3 ways to define acids and bases, you will.
Diprotic and Polyprotic Acids: Two or more dissociable protons Consider the carbonic acid equilibrium.
+ UNIT 10 – Acids and Bases You need a Pre-1982 Penny For Lab on Friday!!
Titrations. Acid-base indicators are… Compounds whose color is sensitive to pH. Either weak acids or weak bases. pH paper is a universal indicator. It.
Chapter 15 & 16: Applications of Aqueous Equilibrium.
KAU-Faculty of Science- Biochemistry department Analytical biochemistry lab (Bioc 343) 2012 T.A Nouf Alshareef
Buffer Effectiveness – Titrations and pH Curves.
Acid-Base Equilibria Sections (Unit 18A)
Titrations and pKa CHEMISTRY Titrations and Pka predictions  Titrations  Method of quantitative/chemical analysis which can be used to determine.
Titration and pH Curves..   A titration curve is a plot of pH vs. volume of added titrant.
Chapter 10 Acids, Bases, and Salts. Chapter 10 Table of Contents Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved Arrhenius Acid-Base Theory 10.2Brønsted-Lowry.
Hydronium Ions and Hydroxide Ions Self-Ionization of Water In the self-ionization of water, two water molecules produce a hydronium ion and a hydroxide.
Buffers In general, what is a buffer?????
Chapter 18 Acids and Bases.
2. Protonated Salts These are usually amphoteric salts which react as acids and bases. For example, NaH2PO4 in water would show the following equilibria:
Lecture 1 Determination of the Concentration and the Acid Dissociation Constants of an Unknown Amino Acid.
Weak Acid/ Strong Base Titrations Weak Base/ Strong Acid Titrations
Chapter 11 Acid-Base Titrations
Titration curve of amino acids
Titration of a Weak Base with a Strong Acid The same principles applied above are also applicable where we have: 1. Before addition of any acid, we have.
What are acids and bases?. Monoprotic and diprotic acids Many acids are called monoprotic acids. This means that they only donate one mole of protons.
Presentation transcript:

Lecture 1 Determination of the Concentration and THE Acid Dissociation Constants of an Unknown Amino Acid

Scheduling This week in lab: Tuesday/Wednesday: Check-in and Pipette calibration Thursday/Friday: Start of experiment 8: “The determination of the concentration and the acid dissociation constants of an amino acid” Experiment 8 takes a total of two lab periods (4/3-4/9) Today’s lecture: Titration of an unknown amino acids Hint: You may think of the unknown amino acid containing both HA+/- and H2A+ forms of the amino acid

Polyprotic Acids Definition: Polyprotic acids, also known as polybasic acids, are able to donate more than one proton per acid molecule, in contrast to monoprotic acids that only donate one proton per molecule. The protons are usually released one at a time. Examples: sulfuric acid (H2SO4=O2S(OH)2), phosphoric acid (H3PO4= (OP(OH)3), carbonic acid (H2CO3=OC(OH)2), oxalic acid ((COOH)2), all amino acids (H2N-CHR-COOH) Acid pKa1 pKa2 pKa3 Ascorbic acid 4.10 11.60 Carbonic acid 6.37 10.32 Malic acid 3.40 5.20 Oxalic acid 1.27 4.27 Phthalic acid 2.98 5.28 Phosphoric acid 2.15 7.20 12.35 Sulfuric acid strong 1.92

Amino Acids Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins and enzymes Amino acids have the form H2N-CHR-COOH where R is a side chain Proteins dominantly contain the (S)-enantiomer (exception: (R)-cysteine, glycine (achiral)) NutraSweet (aspartame, artificial sweetener) is a famous dipeptide composed of phenylalanine and aspartic acid Penicillins are tripeptides (L-Cysteine, D-Valine, L-Aminoadipic acid) The isoelectric point is the pH value at which the molecule carries no net electrical charge (HL). At this point, the amino acid displays its lowest solubility in polar solvents (i.e., water, salt solutions) and does not migrate in the electrical field either.

Diprotic Acids I Diprotic acids undergo the following equilibria:   H2L+ HL + H+ Ka1 HL L- + H+ Ka2 Three possible forms in solution: H2L+, HL, L- The solution contains all three species at any given time. The individual concentration depends on the pH-value.

Diprotic Acids II Relevance: Example: Bicarbonate buffer system pH<6.37: [H2CO3] > [HCO3-] >>> [CO32-] pH=6.37: [H2CO3]=[HCO3-] 6.37<pH<8.35: [HCO3-] > [H2CO3] >> [CO32-] 8.35<pH<10.32: [HCO3-] > [CO32-] >> [H2CO3] pH=10.32: [HCO3-]=[CO32-] pH>10.32: [CO32-] > [HCO3-] >>> [H2CO3] Relevance: pH-value of blood: 7.35-7.45 pH=7.4: 91.5% HCO3-/8.5 % H2CO3 H2CO3 H2CO3

Example I Leucine Since Ka1 >>> Ka2, only the first equilibrium has to be considered at low pH-values pKa1=2.33 pKa2=9.75

Example II What is the pH-value of a 0.05 M H2L+ solution? The 5 % rule fails in this case. Thus, the quadratic formula has to be used here.   x =1.31 * 10-2 M = [H+] (=26.2 %>>5 %) pH= -log([H+])=1.88 For the calculation above, we assumed that the second equilibrium was unimportant (L- ≈ 0). Ka1 =

Example III However, using the number above we can find the true concentration. With [HL] = [H+] =1.31 * 10-2 M. The calculation shows that the concentration of L- is indeed very low compared to the other concentrations. Ka2 = L- = = 1.79x10-10

Titration I Titration of diprotic acid has six points of interest P1: Initial pH-value P2: pH-value at halfway to first equivalence point (pH=pKa1) P3: pH-value at first equivalence point P4: pH-value at halfway to second equivalence point (pH=pKa2) P5: pH-value at first equivalence point P6: pH-value after adding excess of base V= 0 Veq/2 Veq 1.5 Veq 2 Veq 2.5 Veq

Titration II Example: Titration of 10 mL of 0.050 M H2L+ with 0.050 M NaOH Two reactions have to be considered H2L+ + OH- HL + H2O (1) HL + OH- L- + H2O (2) Step 1: Initial pH-value (see previous calculation) Step 2: After 5.0 mL of base have been added, [H2L+]=[HL]  pH=pKa1=2.33 Step 3: After 10.0 mL of base were added, the first equivalence point is reached (=isoelectric point)  pH=6.04

Titration III Step 4: After 15.0 mL of base have been added, [HL]=[L-]  pH=pKa2= 9.75 Step 5: After 20.0 mL of base were added, the second equivalence point is reached. Since all of HL is converted to L-, the hydrolysis of L- has to be considered (ICE). L- + H2O HL + OH- L- HL OH- Initial 5.0*10-4 moles (=0.010 L *0.050 M) ~0 Change -x +x Equilibrium

Titration IV Step 5 (continued): Determine pKb of L- Determine [OH-] Using the quadratic equation, one obtains y = [OH-] = 9.38*10-4 M (= 5.5 % of 0.0167 M) pOH = 3.03  pH=10.97

Titration V Step 6: After 25.0 mL of base have been added, all H2L+ has been converted to L-. This required 20.0 mL of base to accomplish. There is an excess of 5.0 mL of base in the solution Find number of moles of base n = 0.0050 L * 0.050 M = 2.5*10-4 moles Find concentration of base c = 2.5*10-4 moles/0.0350 L = 7.14*10-3 M Find pOH and pH pOH = -log([OH-]) = 2.15 pH = 14 – pOH = 11.85

Summary for Leucine The six points of interest in the titration of 0.050 M leucine with 0.050 M NaOH are Point Base added Equivalence pH-value Comments P1 0.0 mL 0.0 1.88 P2 5.0 mL 0.5 2.33 =pKa1 P3 10.0 mL 1.0 6.04 =(pKa1+pKa2)/2 P4 15.0 mL 1.5 9.75 =pKa2 P5 20.0 mL 2.0 10.97 P6 25.0 mL 2.5 11.85

Individual Work In lab, this week on Thursday and Friday The student obtains a standardized NaOH solution. The students have used pH meters before (Chem 14BL) so the calibration should go rather smoothly. If you do not remember how to do it anymore, please review it in the lab manual (page 12). Make sure to keep the standardized sodium hydroxide and the unknown amino acid solution. DO NOT store your standard solution (NaOH) in volumetric flasks. Use other glassware to store the solutions (ask your TA). The student has to perform three titrations of the unknown amino acid solution (until pH=12) Clean-up Neutralize all titrant solutions with citric acid until the pH paper turns light green or orange before discarding in the drain. Pour the small amount of waste NaOH used to rinse the burette into the labeled waste container. Do not pour un-neutralized NaOH solutions down the drain. At the end of the assignment, place the capped bottles of unused NaOH and amino acid on the lab cart for return to the lab support

Report Use Excel for plotting titration curves and first-derivative graphs. The pKa’s of the amino acid are determined from the full titration graph To determine pKa1 and pKa2, locate the volume on the graphs half way between the two equivalence point volumes determined from the expanded derivative curves. The pH at this point is in the titration is equal to pKa2. Next, measure an equal distance on the graph to the left of Vep1. The pH at this point is equal to pKa1. Error Analysis: Calculate the relative average deviation in the concentrations of your amino acid. Compare the relative average deviation with the inherent error calculated by propagating the errors in measurements of the pipet, the volumes determined from the graphs, and the standard base solution. Estimate the absolute error in your pKa’s by considering the variability you had in the pH’s of the solutions at the |DVep/2| points in the three titrations. Report the range for each of the pKa’s. The report is due on April 15, 2014 or April 16, 2014 at the beginning of the lab section.