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Published byAbraham Marshall Modified over 8 years ago
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Properties of Acids Taste sour pH < 7 Turn litmus red Colorless with phenolphthalein Neutralize bases React with metals to produce H 2 gas React with carbonates to produce CO 2, H 2 O, and a salt.
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Properties of Bases Taste bitter pH > 7 Turn litmus blue Bright pink with phenolphthalein Neutralize acids Dissolve wool Feel slippery
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Acid Base Definitions Originally recognized by properties like taste, feel, reactions with indicators
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Arrenhius Definition Acids produce excess Hydrogen ions when added to water Bases produce excess Hydroxide ions when added to water Issues: – Very limited definition – Very few substances can actually be classified by this definition.
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Bronsted-Lowry Definition Acids are proton victims, “donors” – The molecule loses an H + Bases are proton thieves, “acceptors” – Steal an H + from another molecule More frequently used
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Conjugate base Ion that is formed when an acid donates a Hydrogen ion (proton) Examples:AcidConjugate base H 2 SO 4 HSO 4 1- HNO 3 NO 3 1- HC 2 H 3 O 2 C 2 H 3 O 2 1-
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Conjugate base If original acid is a strong acid, the conjugate base is so weak that is does not behave as a base. – It behaves as a neutral species If original acid is a weak acid, the conjugate base behaves as a weak base (Important for equilibrium considerations later)
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Conjugate acid Ion that is formed when a base accepts a Hydrogen ion Examples:BaseConjugate acid NaOHH 2 O NH 3 NH 4 1+
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Conjugate acid If original base is a strong base, the conjugate acid is so weak that is does not behave as an acid. – It behaves as a neutral species If original base is a weak base, the conjugate acid behaves as a weak acid
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Amphoteric Substances A species that can behave as either an acid or a base Water is the best example of an amphoteric substance
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Strong Acids Acid that dissociates completely in water 100% of the sample breaks apart into ions Six strong acids: 1. HCl- Hydrochloric acid 2. HBr- Hydrobromic acid 3. HI- Hydroiodic acid 4. HNO 3 - Nitric acid 5. H 2 SO 4 - Sulfuric acid 6. HClO 4 - Perchloric acid *HClO 3 - Chloric acid is borderline
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Strong Base Base that dissociates completely in water 100% of the sample breaks apart into ions Strong bases – Hydroxides of the metals in group 1A and 2A (not Be or Mg)
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Weak acid or weak base Do NOT dissociate completely in water In water, establishes equilibrium between the molecular form and ionic form Any acid or base that is not a strong acid or base is weak Example: Acetic acid HC 2 H 3 O 2 + H 2 O C 2 H 3 O 2 1- + H 3 O 1+
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Autoionization of water The transfer of a hydrogen ion from one water molecule to another water molecule, – results in the formation of a hydroxide ion and a hydronium ion. Equation:2 H 2 O H 3 O 1+ + OH 1- Equal amounts of hydroxide and hydronium are formed, – so water remains neutral.
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pH system The pH of a system is an indication of the [H 3 O 1+ ]. While it is based on the autoionization of water, it works for all acid- base systems.
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pH system Definitions: pH = -log [H 3 O 1+ ] pOH = -log [OH 1- ] pK w = -log K w Since K w = 1.0 x 10 -14, pK w = -log (1.0 x 10 -14 ) = 14 K w = [H 3 O 1+ ] [OH -1 ] pK w = pH + pOH = 14
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pH Strong Acids and Bases [H 3 O 1+ ] = initial concentration of acid – To find the pH of a strong acid, use the initial concentration of the acid as the concentration of H 3 O 1+ [OH 1- ] = initial concentration of base pH (strong acid) = -log (initial conc.)
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