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1A + 2B 1C + 1D Calculate the equilibrium concentrations of each species when 150 mL 2.5 M A is mixed with 100.0 mL 2.5 M B. K c = 2.0 x 10 -10
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Drill: 1A + 2B 1C + 1D Calculate the equilibrium concentrations of each species when a solution is made with 1.0 M A & 1.0 M B. K c = 2.0 x 10 -12
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Acid/Base
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Properties of Acids ·Sour taste, Change color of dyes, Conduct electricity in solution, React with many metals, React with bases to form salts
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Properties of Bases ·Bitter taste, Feel slippery, Change color of dyes, Conduct electricity in solution, React with acids to form salts
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Arrhenius ·Acids: release H + or H 3 O + in solution ·Bases: release OH - in solution
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Arrhenius ·Acid: HA H + + A - ·HCl H + + Cl - ·Base: MOH M + + OH - ·NaOH Na + + OH -
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Bronsted-Lowry ·Acid: Proton donor ·Base: Proton Acceptor
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Bronsted-Lowry ·HA + H 2 O H 3 O + + A - ·HI + H 2 O H 3 O + + I - ·Acid Base CA CB ·NH 3 + H 2 O NH 4 + + OH - ·Base Acid CA CB
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Lewis Acid/Base ·Acid: Electron Acceptor ·Base: Electron Donor
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Lewis Acid/Base H 3 N: + BF 3 H 3 N-BF 3 Base Acid Neutral
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Common Names ·H + Hydrogen ion ·H 3 O + Hydronium ion ·H - Hydride ion ·OH - Hydroxide ion ·NH 3 Ammonia ·NH 4 + Ammonium ion
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Amphiprotism ·Can act like an acid or a base ·Can donate or accept protons
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Strong Acids or Bases ·Strong acids or bases ionize 100 % in solution ·Weak acids or bases ionize <100 % in solution
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Drill: Name each of the following: KOHHBr Al(OH) 3 H 2 CO 3 HClO 4 NH 3
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Naming Acids ·All acids are H-anion ·If the anion is: ·-ides hydro___ic acids ·-ates ___ic acids ·-ites ___ous acids
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Naming Bases ·Almost all bases are metal hydroxides ·Name by normal method ·Ammonia (NH 3 ) as well as many amines are bases
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Strong Acids or Bases ·Strong acids or bases ionize 100 % in solution ·Weak acids or bases ionize <100 % in solution
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Strong Acids ·HClO 4 Perchloric acid ·H 2 SO 4 Sulfuric acid ·HNO 3 Nitric acid ·HClHydrochloric acid ·HBrHydrobromic acid ·HIHydroiodic acid
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Strong Bases ·All column I hydroxides ·Ca(OH) 2 Calcium hydroxide ·Sr(OH) 2 Strontium hydroxide ·Ba(OH) 2 Barium hydroxide
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Strong Acid/Base Ionizes 100 % (1 M) HAH + + A - 1 M – all1 1
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Binary Acids ·Acids containing only 2 elements ·HClHydrochloric acid ·H 2 SHydrosulfuric acid
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Ternary Acids ·Acids containing 3 elements ·H 2 SO 4 Sulfuric acid ·HNO 3 Nitric acid
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Monoprotic Acids ·Acids containing only one ionizable hydrogen ·HBr Hydrobromic acid ·HC 2 H 3 O 2 Acetic acid
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Diprotic Acids ·Acids containing 2 ionizable hydrogens ·H 2 SO 4 Sulfuric acid ·H 2 CO 3 Carbonic acid
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Triprotic Acids ·Acids containing 3 ionizable hydrogens ·H 3 PO 4 Phosphoric acid ·H 3 AsO 4 Arsenic acid
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Polyprotic Acids ·Acids containing more than one ionizable hydrogens ·H 4 SiO 4 Silicic acid ·H 2 CO 2 Carbonous acid
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Monohydroxic Base ·A base containing only one ionizable hydroxide ·NaOHSodium hydroxide ·LiOHLithium hydroxide
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Neutralization Rxn ·A reaction between an acid & a base making salt & H 2 O ·HA (aq) + MOH (aq) MA (aq) + H 2 O (l)
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Neutralization Rxn HCl (aq) + NaOH (aq) NaCl (aq) + H 2 O (l)
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pH ·The negative log of the hydrogen or hydronium ion concentration ·pH = -log[H + ] ·pOH = -log[OH - ]
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Calculate the pH of each of the following: 1) [H + ] = 0.040 M 2) [HCl] = 0.0025 M 3) [HBr] = 0.080 M
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Calculate the pOH of each of the following: 1) [OH - ] = 0.030 M 2) [KOH] = 0.0025 M 3) [NaOH] = 4.0 x 10 -7 M
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Standard Solution ·A solution with known concentration
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Drill: Identify: acid, base, CA, & CB HCO 3 - + H 2 O H 2 CO 3 + OH -
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Titration ·A method of determining the concentration of one solution by reacting it with a standard solution
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Titration Formula for monoprotic solutions M A V A = M B V B
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Titration Fact When titrating acids against bases, the end point of the titration is at the equivalence point
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Equivalence Point ·The point where the concentrations of the two solutions in the titration are equal
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Acid/Base Equivalence Point The point where the H + concentration is equal to the OH - concentration
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Titration Fact No changes will be observed when titrating acids against bases; thus, one must use an indicator to see changes
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Indicator ·An organic dye that changes color when the pH changes
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·Calculate the molarity of 25.0 mL HCl when it’s titrated to its equivalence point with 50.0 mL 0.200 M NaOH
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Titration Formula for monoprotic solutions M A V A = M B V B
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Dilution Formula M 1 V 1 = M 2 V 2
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·Calculate the mL of 16.0 M HNO 3 it takes to make 4.0 L of 0.100 M HNO 3
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Make Calculations ·Calculate the mL of 12.5 M HCl required to make 2.5 L of 0.200 M HCl
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Molarity ·Moles of solute per liter of solution (M)
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Normality ·Number of moles of hydrogen or hydroxide ions per liter of solution (N)
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Titration Formula for Acid/Base ·N A V A = N B V B ·Elliott’s Rule: ·# H M A V A = # OH M B V B
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Make Calculations ·Calculate the molarity of 30.0 mL H 2 CO 3 when it’s titrated to its equivalence point with 75.0 mL 0.200 M NaOH
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Make Calculations ·Calculate the molarity of 40.0 mL H 3 PO 4 when it’s titrated to its equivalence point with 30.0 mL 0.20 M Ba(OH) 2
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Calculate the volume of 0.250 M HCl needed to titrate 50.00 mL 0.200 M NaOH to its equivalence point
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Calculate the molarity 25.0 mL H 3 PO 4 that neutralizes 50.00 mL 0.200 M Ca(OH) 2 to its equivalence point
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Titration Curve: Strong acid vs strong base
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Titration Curve: Strong acid vs strong base; then weak acid vs strong base
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Titration Curve: Strong base vs strong acid; then weak base vs strong acid
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3.2 g HI is dissolved in a 1250 mL aqueous solution. Calculate its pH.
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Calculate the volume of 0.10 M H 3 PO 4 that neutralizes 50.00 mL 0.200 M Ca(OH) 2 to its equivalence point
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Drill: Calculate the molarity of 25.00 mL of H 3 PO 4 that was titrated to its equivalence point with 75.00 mL of 0.125 M Ba(OH) 2.
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