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Acids and Bases
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Acids and Bases We encounter acids and bases everyday
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Acids and Bases Acids (taste sour) Bases (taste bitter, feel slippery)
flavorings (citrus, vinegar) household products (plastic, detergent, batteries) acid rain Bases (taste bitter, feel slippery) soaps antacid (tums, rolaids)
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Acid Reactions Acids react with metals to produce hydrogen gas
Zn(s) + 2HCl(aq) ZnCl2(aq) + H2(g)
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Acid Reactions Acids react with metal carbonates and hydrogen carbonates to produce carbon dioxide NaHCO3(s) + HC2H3O2(aq) NaC2H3O2(aq) + H2O(l) + CO2(g) geologists can identify a rock as limestone by putting a few drops of hydrochloric acid on it and watching for bubbles of carbon dioxide to form
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Identifying Acids or Bases
litmus is a dye that can distinguish solutions of acids and bases aqueous solutions of acids turn blue litmus paper pink aqueous base solutions turn red litmus paper blue
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Identifying Acids or Bases
Acids and bases also conduct electricity That makes them electrolytes
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What makes a solution acidic or basic?
Why are some things acidic and some things are basic? The relative concentrations of: hydrogen ions [H+] hydroxide ions [OH-]
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[H+] and [OH-] If [H+] is greater than [OH-], its an acid
If [H+] is less than [OH-], its a base If [H+] =[OH-], its neither-its neutral
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[H+] and [OH-] The solvent for acids and bases is usually water
When water ionizes it forms equal amounts of H+ and OH- H2O H OH- Since [H+] = [OH-], water is neutral
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Arrhenius Acid and Bases
Arrhenius was a Swedish chemist (1883) that wondered how aqueous solutions became acidic or basic. An acid is a substance containing hydrogen that ionizes in water to produce H+ ions in solution HCl(g) + H2O H3O+(aq) + Cl- (aq)
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Vocabulary Word Arrhenius acid: a substance containing hydrogen that ionizes in water to produce H+ ions in solution
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Arrhenius Acid and Bases
base: substance containing a hydroxide group (OH-) that dissociates to produce OH- ions in solution NaOH(s) H2O Na+(aq) + OH-(aq)
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Vocabulary Word Arrhenius base: substance containing a hydroxide group (OH-) that dissociates to produce OH- ions in solution
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Problem Not all bases contain OH- groups
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Revised Model In 1923 Bronsted (a Danish scientist) and Lowry (a British scientist) independently proposed a model that focuses on H+ ions Bronsted-Lowry model acids are H+ donors bases are H+ acceptors.
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Vocabulary Word Bronsted-Lowry acid: H+ donor
Bronsted-Lowry base: H+ acceptor
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Bronsted-Lowry Acids and Bases
HX + H2O H3O X- acid base conjugate conjugate acid base The reaction in both directions involves an acid and a base The base becomes the conjugate acid after it receives the proton The acid becomes the conjugate base after it donates the proton
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Vocabulary Words conjugate acid: the species produced when a base accepts a hydrogen ion from an acid conjugate base: the species produced when an acid donates a hydrogen ion to a base
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Acid Base Reactions acid base conj. acid conj. base
Every Bronsted-Lowry interaction involves conjugate acid-base pairs Identify the acid, base, conjugate acid and conjugate base: acid base conj. acid conj. base
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Bronsted-Lowry Bases Ammonia is a base according to the Bronsted-Lowry model, because it can accept a hydrogen ion
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Identify the Species conj. base conj. acid acid base conj. acid
water can be an acid or a base so it’s amphoteric
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