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Published byGilbert Hines Modified over 9 years ago
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…all you need to “get” for the test… In 20 minutes!
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AcidBase Produces hydronium in aqueous (water) solutions (Arrhenius) Donates hydrogen ions to another species (Bronsted-Lowry) Taste sour pH < 7 Turns litmus (and many other indicators red) Produces hydroxide in aqueous (water) solutions (Arrhenius) Receives hydrogen ions from acid (Bronsted- Lowry) Taste bitter; feel slippery pH > 7 Turns litmus (and many other indicators blue)
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A compound’s ability to behave as an acid is that’s compound’s ability to “donate” hydrogen ions (protons). “Strong” acids release those ions VERY readily and completely For example CH 4 is NOT an acid—at all! That donation is represented thusly: H 2 SO 4 + H 2 O HSO 4 1- + H 3 O 1+ (1 st ionization) HSO 4 1- + H 2 O SO 4 2- + H 3 O 1+ (2 nd ionization)
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HSO 4 1- + H 2 O SO 4 2- + H 3 O 1+ What you should notice: HSO 4 1- becomes SO 4 2- ; therefore, (donates H 1+ ) in the reverse, SO 4 2- becomes HSO 4 1- (receives H + ) H 2 O becomes H 3 O 1+ ; therefore, (receives H + ) In the reverse, H 3 O 1+ becomes H 2 O (donates H + ) Translation: for weak ionizations and/or dilute solutions, that are reversible (in equilibrium), acids become conjugate bases, and, conversely, bases become conjugate acids.
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HF + H 2 OH 3 O + + F - NH 4 + + OH - NH 3 + H 2 O CO 3 2- + H 2 OHCO 3 - + OH -
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Hydronium ions in the presence of hydroxide ions can form water! Of course, the leftovers ions form a “salt”. For example: HCl (aq) + NaOH (aq) H 2 O (l) + Na + (aq) Cl - (aq) Because both the acid and the base are “strong”, the resulting hydronium and hydroxide concentration are equal. The resulting pH is neutral. The “salt” is sodium chloride. Another example: HSO 4 - + NaOHH 2 O (l) + Na + + SO 4 2- + OH - The resulting solution is still basic.
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The actual measurements of concentration result in the calculation of pH. Pure water is defined by equal concentrations of hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions. [H 3 O + ] = [OH - ] = 1 x 10 -7 M [H 3 O + ] x [OH - ] = 1 x 10 -14 (memorize these numbers)
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Using the logarithmic function of those concentrations, we get the pH scale: Water has a pH of 7 pH = -log [H 3 O + ] Higher concentrations of hydronium means a smaller log! 2.34 x 10 -4 [H 3 O + ] = 3.63 Smaller concentrations mean higher logs! 2.34 x 10 -10 [H 3 O + ] = 9.63
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Because a species is only an acid or a base in water, the concentrations of these ions are related: [H 3 O + ] [OH - ] = 1 x 10 -14 Which means that as one concentration increases, the other decreases…. (don’t forget the constant.) One can also take the pOH of the hydroxide concentration. Interestingly, pH + pOH = 14
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Buffer- a solution that resists changes in pH when limited amounts of acid OR base are added. Ions of “weak” acids and bases, by definition, mean ions that are available to receive or to donate hydrogen ions &/or hydroxide ions. CO 2(g) + H 2 O (l) H 2 CO 3 (aq) H + (aq) + HCO 3 - (aq)
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Compile 3 questions to ask/clarify/review: 1. 2. 3.
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