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Solubility Product & Common-Ion Effect Acids & Bases
Aqueous Equilibria Solubility Product & Common-Ion Effect Acids & Bases
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Dynamic equilibrium occurs in reversible reactions.
For a reaction: aA + bB cC + dD The equilibrium-constant expression is Kc = [C]c [D]d (Products) [A]a [B]b (Reactants) Kp = PCc PDd P – partial pressures PAa PBb Le Chatelier’s principle: the effects of changes in concentration of reactants or products, pressure (volume) or temperature can be predicted. The equilibrium constant varies only with temperature. Catalyst increase rates of forward & reverse rxns.
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Solubility Equilibria and Solubility Product
Solubility equilibrium is any chemical equilibrium between a solid compound and its dissolved states at saturation. For example: CaSO4 (s) Ca2+ (aq) + SO42- (aq) Using the equilibrium expression as before: Kc = [Ca2+(aq)][SO42-(aq)] {CaSO4(s)} but {CaSO4 (s)} = 1
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Solubility Equilibria and Solubility Product
Therefore, this reduces to the solubility-product expression: Ksp = [Ca2+][SO42-] = 4.93 × 10−5 This expression means that for an aqueous solution in equilibrium (saturated) with solid CaSO4, the product of the concentrations of the two ions equals the solubility-product constant, Ksp. Units for Ksp?
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Solubility Product Note that solubility and solubility product are not the same. The solubility of a substance is the quantity of substance that dissolves in a solvent to form a saturated solution, usually in g / L. The solubility product is the equilibrium constant for the equilibrium between an ionic solid and its saturated solution.
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Addition of Ca2+ or F- shifts equilibrium
Common-Ion Effect The solubility of a substance is affected by: temperature presence of other solutes. So, the presence of Ca2+ (aq) or F- (aq) in a solution reduces the solubility of CaF2: CaF2 (s) Ca2+ (aq) + 2F- (aq) Addition of Ca2+ or F- shifts equilibrium
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Common-Ion Effect The common-ion effect refers to the fact that solubility equilibria will shift in response to additions of a common ion – Le Chatelier’s principle. Ksp does not change when additional solutes are present.
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Examples 1. Solid silver chromate is added to water at 25C. Some of the solid remains undissolved at the bottom of the flask. The equilibrium solution is analysed and the concentration of Ag+ is determined to be 1.3 x 10-4 M. Assuming that Ag2CrO4 dissociates completely in water, and there are no other important equilibria involving the Ag+ or CrO42-, calculate the Ksp for the compound. 2. Calculate the molar solubility of CaF2 at 25C in a solution that is in M Ca(NO3)2. Ksp (CaF2) = 3.9 x
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Acid-Base Equilibria Arrhenius Acid:
substance that when dissolved in water increases the concentration of H+ ions. Example: HCl (g) H+ (aq) + Cl- (aq) Arrhenius Base: increases concentration of OH- ions H2O
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Acid-Base Equilibria Brønsted-Lowry Acids:
substance (molecule or ion) that can donate a proton to another substance. ACID: HCl(g) + H2O(l) H3O+(aq) + Cl- (aq) While a base accepts a proton: BASE: HCl(g) + NH3(g) NH4Cl(s) (NH Cl-) Hydronium ion
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Acid-Base Equilibria Lewis Acid:
substance that can accept a pair of electrons. Lewis bases are electron-pair donors. base acid
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Acid-Base Equilibria When an acid goes into solution, a conjugate base is formed: HA (aq) + H2O (l) ↔ A- (aq) + H3O+ (aq) HA and A- are the conjugate acid-base pair. Water will also “autoionize”: H2O (l) + H2O (l) ↔ H3O+ (aq) + OH- (aq) Conjugate base
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Acid-Base Equilibria OH- H2O H3O+
conjugate base conjugate acid of OH conjugate acid of H2O conjugate base of H3O+ of H2O Kw = [H3O+] [OH-] = 1.0 x at 25C (Kw – ionic product of water) [H3O+] = [OH-] = 1.0 x = 1.0 x 10-7 M at 25C
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Strength of Acids and Bases
Acid and base strengths: Strong acids completely transfer their protons to water leaving no undissociated molecules in aqueous solution (completely dissociates) Weak acids only partially dissociate in water and therefore exist as a mixture of acid molecules and ions in equilibrium. A strong acid, e.g., HCl, will almost completely dissociate in water to H3O+ and Cl- ions.
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Strength of Acids and Bases
While, H2O and acetic acid are weak acids: CH3COOH (l) ↔ CH3COO- (aq) + H3O+ (aq) Strong and weak bases: NaOH (s) Na+ (aq) + OH- (aq) NH3 (aq) + H2O (l) ↔ NH4+ (aq) + OH- (aq) H2O H2O
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Water and the pH Scale pH scale: 1 – 14 pH = -log10[H3O+]
Kw = [H3O+][OH-] = 1.0 x at 25C At 25 C, [H3O+] = 1.0 x 10-7 M pH of water at 25 C = -log (1.0 x 10-7 M) = 7.0 pOH = -log10[OH-] and pH + pOH = 14
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Water and the pH Scale 0.10 M HCl solution (strong acid) contains 0.10 M H3O+ ions: pH of 0.10 M HCl = -log (0.10 M) = 1.0 A 0.10 M NaOH solution (strong base) has what pH? Kw = [H3O+] [OH-] [H3O+] = Kw / [OH-] pH of 0.10 M NaOH = -log (1.0 x / 0.10 M) = 13
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Acid and Base Dissociation Constants
For weak acids and bases, an equilibrium exists: HCl (aq) + H2O (l) ↔ Cl- (aq) + H3O+ (aq) Ka = [H3O+] [Cl-] [HCl] NH3 (aq) + H2O (l) ↔ NH4+ (aq) + OH- (aq) Kb = [NH4+ [OH-] [NH3]
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Acid and Base Dissociation Constants
Ka – acid dissociation constant Kb – base dissociation constant Kw – ionic product of water Ka x Kb = Kw or pKa + pKb = pKw pKa = -log10Ka pKb = -log10Kb pKw = -log10Kw
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Example Problem: A student prepared a solution of M acetic acid solution and measured its pH to be Calculate the Ka for acetic acid. CH3COOH (aq) + H2O(l) H3O+ (aq) + CH3COO- (aq) Ka = [H3O+] [CH3COO-] [CH3COOH] pH = 2.88 -log [H3O+] = 2.88 [H3O+] = = 1.3 x 10-3 M Ka = (1.3 x 10-3 M) (1.3 x 10-3 M) = 1.7 x 10-5 (1.0 x 10-1 M)
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