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Acids and Bases
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Acids and Bases Acids and Bases are one way of classifying matter through its properties.
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Properties of Acids and Bases
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Acids Sour taste
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Acids Reacts with carbonates to form CO 2 gas MgCO 3(s) + 2HCl (aq) → MgCl 2(aq) + H 2 O (l) + CO 2(g) carbonate acid salt water carbon dioxide *Remember that you can test for CO 2 using a burning splint. The CO 2 gas will put out the flame of the burning splint.
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Acids React with metals to form a salt compound and hydrogen gas (pop!) 2 HCl + Mg MgCl 2 + H 2 acid metal salt hydrogen gas *Remember that you can test for H 2 using a burning splint. The H 2 gas will make a popping sound and put out the flame of the burning splint.
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Acids Electrolytes - chemicals that dissociate when in water
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Acids
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Turn litmus paper red
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Acids No color change with phenolphthalein indicator
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Acids ph < 7
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Acids
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Bases Bitter taste
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Bases Feel slippery
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Bases Electrolytes
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Bases Turn litmus paper blue
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Bases Turns pink with phenolphthalein indicator
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Bases ph > 7
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Neutral solutions Substances that have neither acidic nor basic properties do not change the color of red or blue litmus paper or phenolphthalein pH equals 7 nonelectrolytes chemwiki
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Definitions of Acids and Bases
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Arrhenius Definition Arrhenius acids - give (donate) hydrogen ions (H + ) in aqueous solution. *an H + ion is a proton
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Arrhenius Acid
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Arrhenius bases – give (donate) hydroxide ions (OH) -1 in aqueous solution.
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Arrhenius Base
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Practice Using the Arrhenius definition, classify the following as an acid or a base in water 1.HI 2.HNO 3 3.Ca(OH) 2 4.H 2 SO 4 5.Mg(OH) 2 Acid, in water HI H + + I - Acid, in water HNO 3 H + + NO 3 - Base, in water Ca(OH) 2 Ca +2 + 2OH - Base, in water Mg(OH) 2 Mg +2 + 2OH - Acid, in water H 2 SO 4 2H + + SO 4 -2
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Brönsted-Lowry Definition Acids donate a proton or H + Bases accept a proton or H +
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Brönsted-Lowry Definition
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A conjugate base is the remainder of the original acid, after it donates its hydrogen ion A conjugate acid is the particle formed when the original base gains a hydrogen ion
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Practice: Brönsted-Lowry Acids and Bases Identify the B-L acid (a), conjugate base (c.b.), B-L base (b), and conjugate acid (c.a.) 1. HCl + H 2 O ↔ H 3 O + + Cl - 2. HNO 2 + H 2 O ↔ H 3 O + + NO 2 - 3. SO 3 -2 + H 2 O ↔ HSO 3 - + OH - Ans: acid + base ↔ c.a. + c.b Ans: base + acid ↔ c.a. + c.b
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The pH concept Acidic Alkaline (basic) Neutral www.fcs.ext.vt.edu
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pH scale 35 [H + ] [OH - ] 1407
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pHpH (8:53) formula: pH = -log[H + ] where [H + ] = concentration of H + ions
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Example 1: What is the pH of a solution with [H + ] = 1 x 10 -3 M? formula: pH = -log[H + ] where [H + ] = concentration of H + ions Example 2: What is the pH of a solution with [H + ] = 1 x 10 -8 M?
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The pH concept 1. [H + ] = 0.01 M 2. H + ] = 0.0001 M 3. [H + ] = 10 -7 M 4. [H + ] = 0.015 M 5. [H + ] = 3.2 x 10 -10 M 6. [H + ] = 6.5 x 10 -4 M 7. [H + ] = 4.5 x 10 -8 M pH = 2, acid Practice: Find the pH of the following solutions and state whether the solution is an acid, base or neutral. pH = 4, acid pH = 1.8, acid pH = 9.5, base pH = 3.2, acid pH = 7, neutral pH = 7.3, base
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Strong Acids and Bases Strong acids completely dissociate and release [H + ] ions. HCl H + + Cl - Strong bases completely dissociate and release [OH - ] ions. NaOH Na + + OH - These are the ONLY strong acids: HCl, HBr, HI, HNO 3, HClO 4, H 2 SO 4 Some strong bases – NaOH, KOH, LiOH
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Strong acids Weak Acids s-owl.cengage.com
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Particle diagrams 41 strong acid – complete dissociation weak acid – partial dissociation
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H + concentration of Strong and Weak Acids en.wikibooks.org How is the pH related to the H + ion concentration of weak and strong acids?
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Acid Base Concentration Molarity- The number of moles of solute dissolved in 1.00 L of solution Molarity (M) = Moles of solute Liter of solution Example: What is the molarity of the solution if 2.0 moles of hydrochloric acid are added to 5.0 L of solution? M = 2.0 mol = 0.40 M 5.0 L 43
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Concentrated vs. Dilute Concentrated acids and bases have a relatively large # of moles (of acid or base) per liter of solution. Dilute acids and bases have a relatively small # of moles (of acid or base) per liter of solution. 10.0 M HF is more concentrated than 2.0 M HF. 2.0 M KOH is more dilute than 10.0 M KOH. 44
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Two acids, HCl and HC 2 H 3 O 2 are both 0.10 M. Which has a higher pH and why? H + Concentration of Strong and Weak Acids
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Diluting Solutions Diluting Solutions: V 1 M 1 = V 2 M 2 Example: What volume of 2.0 M H 2 SO 4 would you need to prepare 100. mL of 0.40 M H 2 SO 4 ? 47
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Indicators Chemicals that change color in the presence of an acid or a base Used to determine the pH of a solution Examples: litmus paper (red and blue), pH paper, phenolphthalein, red cabbage juice www.erowid.org catalog.flatworldknowledge.com
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Indicators
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Acid Vocabulary Binary acid – acid that contains only H and one other type of atom Ex. HBr, H 2 S Ternary acid – acid that contains H and a polyatomic ion Ex. H 2 SO 4 Monoprotic acid – acid that only has one H atom Ex. HBr, HI Polyprotic acid – acid that has more than one H atom Ex. H 2 S, H 3 PO 4 *a hydrogen ion, H +, is a proton
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Naming Acids binary
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Naming AcidsNaming Acids (stop at 5:47) No Oxygen w/Oxygen Examples:HCl – hydrochloric acid HClO 3 – chloric acid HClO 2 – chlorous acid binary ternary
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Practice Name the following acids: 1.HI 2.HF 3.H 2 SO 4 4.H 2 SO 3 5.H 2 CO 3 Write the chemical formula: 1.Hydrobromic acid 2.Hydrosulfuric acid 3.Acetic acid 4.Phosphoric acid 5. Nitrous acid Hydroiodic acid Hydrofluoric acid sulfuric acid sulfurous acid carbonic acid H2SH2S HC 2 H 3 O 2 H 3 PO 4 HNO 2 HBr Symbol, ox #, criss-cross
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Hydroxides (OH - ) NaOH sodium hydroxide Mg(OH) 2 magnesium hydroxide Al(OH) 3 aluminum hydroxide Naming Bases Ammonia - NH 3 is a common base found in household glass cleaners. Most bases are named the same as any other ionic compound, for example:
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Writing formulas for acids and bases Symbol, charge, criss-cross to get the subscripts. Example: hydrochloric acid Example: potassium hydroxide
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Practice writing formulas for bases 1.Zinc hydroxide 2. Iron (II) hydroxide 3. Calcium hydroxide 4. Lithium hydroxide
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Neutralization one type of double replacement reaction Reactants are acid and base, products are salt and water Acid + Base Salt + water HCl + NaOH NaCl + H 2 O 57
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TitrationTitration (6:52) A controlled acid-base neutralization reaction The process of finding the concentration of an unknown solution by using a certain volume of a known concentration solution.
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59 This solution is also called the analyte or titer Unknown concentration known concentration
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End point of a titration The point where neutralization is achieved Occurs just before the indicator has changed color DETERMINED BY OBSERVATION, DURING THE TITRATION EXPERIMENT 60
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Equivalence Point the stoichiometric end point of a titration when moles of H + from acid = moles of OH - from base DETERMINED FROM THE DATA COLLECTED IN THE TITRATION EXPERIMENT
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Neutralization Problems- (#H + )M A V A = M B V B (#OH - ) #H + = #H in chemical formula M A = molarity of acid V A = volume of acid M B = molarity of base V B = volume of base #OH - = #OH in chemical formula 63
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Practice: Neutralization Problem (#H + )M A V A = M B V B (#OH - ) When 45.0 mL of 3.00 M HBr is added to 80.0 mL of Ca(OH) 2 What is the molarity of the Ca(OH) 2 that was neutralized? #H + = M A = V A = M B = V B = #OH - = 64
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Practice: Neutralization Problem (#H + )M A V A = M B V B (#OH - ) In a titration experiment, if 65.0 mL of an HCl solution reacts with 47.2 mL of a 0.65-M NaOH solution, what is the concentration of the HCl solution? #H + = M A = V A = M B = V B = #OH - = 65
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Ion Stoichiometry : ) H 2 SO 4 + 2NaOH Na 2 SO 4 + 2H 2 O 240 grams of NaOH react with sulfuric acid. How many moles of H + ions are consumed?
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