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Acids and Bases Chapter 19
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Characteristics of Acids
Sour tasting – vinegar, lemons React with metals and produce H2 (g) React with metal carbonates to produce CO2 Blue Litmus Paper Red Conductive H+ ions > OH- ions pH < 7
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Characteristics of Bases
Bitter tasting (soap) Slippery Red Litmus Paper Blue Conductive OH- ions > H+ ions pH > 7
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Pure Water is Neutral
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Arrhenius Acid Donates a H+ ion in an aqueous solution
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Model doesn’t explain why ammonia is a base.
Arrhenius Base Donates a OH- in an aqueous solution Model doesn’t explain why ammonia is a base.
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Bronsted-Lowry Model Acid – donates a H+ Base –accepts a H+
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Forms when the base accepts a H+ ion
Forms when the acid donates a H+ ion to a base
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Conjugate Acid? Conjugate Base?
Which is the acid? Base? Conjugate Acid? Conjugate Base?
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Bronsted-Lowry Expands the range of acids and bases.
Amphoteric – acts as an acid and a base (water)
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Monoprotic and Polyprotic Acids
Mono – donates only one H+ HCl, HNO3, CH3COOH Not covalently bonded, ionizable Poly – donates more than one H+ Diprotic – H2SO4 Triprotic – H3PO4
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Phosphoric Acid is triprotic
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Acid Strength Strong acids completely ionize
Weak acids do not completely ionize
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Base Strength Strong Bases dissociate into metal ions and hydroxide ions Weak base partially ionizes in dilute aqueous solutions
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Strong Base Weak Acid
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What is pH?
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