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Acid and Base Strength.

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Presentation on theme: "Acid and Base Strength."— Presentation transcript:

1 Acid and Base Strength

2 Acids Have a sour taste.

3 Acids Turn blue litmus red. Turn methyl orange red.

4 Acids Will react with: Mg + 2HCl  MgCl2 + H2 MgO + 2HCl  MgCl2 + H2O
some metals to produce a salt and H2. metal oxides to produce a salt and H2O. metal carbonates to produce a salt, H2O, and CO2. bases to produce a salt and H2O. Mg + 2HCl  MgCl2 + H2 MgO + 2HCl  MgCl2 + H2O MgCO3 + 2HCl  MgCl2 + H2O + CO2 Mg(OH)2 + 2HCl  MgCl2 + 2H2O

5 Acids Are electrolytes. Conduct an electric current when dissolved.

6 Bases Have a bitter taste.
Coffee itself is acidic, but it contains an alkaline compound – caffeine – which contributes to its bitter taste.

7 Bases Feel slimy or slippery to the touch.

8 Bases Turn red litmus blue. Turn methyl orange yellow.
Turn phenolphthalein pink. Litmus pH scale.

9 Bases React with acids to produce salt and H2O.
HCl + NaOH  NaCl + H2O

10 Bases Are electrolytes.

11 Review Properties of Acids Properties of Bases Taste sour.
Turn litmus red. Proton (H+) donors. Inc. [H3O+] in aqueous solutions. Properties of Bases Taste bitter. Turn litmus blue. Proton acceptors. Inc. [OH-] in aqueous solutions. Review

12 Review pH Scale Traditionally 0 - 14. pH < 7  Acidic solution.
Can have pH < 0 or > 14. pH < 7  Acidic solution. pH = 7  Neutral solution. pH > 7  Basic solution. Review

13 pH Scale 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Acidic Basic pH Scale

14 HCl, A Strong Acid

15 HF, A Weak Acid

16 As [H+] Increases, [OH-1] Decreases
1x10-13 M 1x10-12 M 1x10-11 M 1x10-10 M 1x10-9 M 1x10-8 M 1x10-7 M 1x10-6 M 1x10-5 M 1x10-4 M 1x10-3 M 1x10-2 M 1x10-1 M 1x10-13 M 1x10-12 M 1x10-11 M 1x10-10 M 1x10-9 M 1x10-8 M 1x10-7 M 1x10-6 M 1x10-5 M 1x10-4 M 1x10-3 M 1x10-2 M 1x10-1 M Acid added to neutral solution Base added to neutral solution Neutral Solution [H+] [OH-1]

17 [H+] and [OH-1] in Water In any aqueous solution:
[H+] [OH-1] = 1x10-14 As [H+] goes up, [OH-1] must decrease. As [OH-1] goes up, [H+] must decrease. In other words, adding an acid to water causes the solution to become more acidic and less basic. Adding a base to water causes the solution to become less acidic and more basic.

18 [H+] and [OH-1] in Water If [H+] = 1x10-3 M, what is [OH-1]?
[H+][OH-1] = 1x10-14 (1x10-3 M)[OH-1] = 1x10-14 [OH-1] = (1x10-14) / (1x10-3) [OH-1] = 1x10-11 M If [OH-1] = 1x10-8 M, what is [H+]? [H+](1x10-8 M) = 1x10-14 [H+] = (1x10-14) / (1x10-8 M) [H+] = 1x10-6 M

19 pH pH = power of Hydrogen pH = -log10[H+]
negative logarithmic (powers of ten) scale. pH = -log10[H+] If [H+] = 1x10-1 M, pH = -log(1x10-1 M) = 1 If [H+] = 1x10-2 M, pH = -log(1x10-2 M) = 2 If [H+] = 1x10-3 M, pH = -log(1x10-3 M) = 3

20 Calculations Involving pH, pOH, [H+], and [OH-] of strong Acids and Bases
pH = -log [H+] pOH = -log [OH-] pOH + pH = 14

21 [H3O+1] and [OH-1] [H3O+1] [OH-1]

22 pH and pOH What are the pH values of the following solutions?
1x10-1 M H+ pH = -log(1x10-1 M) = 1 1x10-3 M H+ pH = -log(1x10-3 M) = 3 1x10-5 M H+ pH = -log(1x10-5 M) = 5 1x10-1 M OH-1 [H+] = (1x10-14) / (1x10-1 M) = 1x10-13 M pH = -log(1x10-13 M) = 13


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