1 / 49

Chemistry

Chemistry. My family and home. Acids and bases (alkalis). Used by the body, used in other processes: such as food, farming and chemical industries. Chemistry Lesson. Safety in chemistry Acids and alkalis (bases) Neutralisation Using indicators Practical work. Hazard signs to learn…. h.

elsa
Télécharger la présentation

Chemistry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chemistry My family and home

  2. Acids and bases (alkalis) Used by the body, used in other processes: such as food, farming and chemical industries.

  3. Chemistry Lesson • Safety in chemistry • Acids and alkalis (bases) • Neutralisation • Using indicators • Practical work

  4. Hazard signs to learn… h i flammable Corrosive Harmful Irritant

  5. Hazard signs to learn… Radioactive Toxic Dangerous for environment Oxidising

  6. Safety • Irritant- can cause a rash or itching • Harmful-general damage to living organisms • Corrosive-will burn through materials

  7. Safety instructions • Wear goggles • Follow safety instructions

  8. Acids and bases • Acid- A substance that produces hydrogen ions (H+) when it dissolves in water. • Bases- Compounds which react with acids to neutralise them • Alkali- A soluble base, forms hydroxide OH- ions in water. • Neutral-not an acid or base

  9. Symbols in word equations-states of matter • (l) liquid • (g) gas • (s) solid • (aq) aqueous-dissolved in water

  10. Acids and bases (alkalis)

  11. Acid • Examples of acids include : • Vinegar, orange or lemon juice, acid rain, stomach acid, nitric acid, sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acids • Used in car batteries, food and drinks, preserving food, in body.

  12. Acid • Hydrochloric acid is formed when hydrogen chloride is gas dissolves in water. • HCl (g)  H+ (aq) + Cl-(aq)

  13. Alkali (bases) • Examples and uses include: metal hydroxides, metal oxides, cleaning products, stomach antacids, baking powder.

  14. Alkali • Sodium hydroxide is formed when the solid is dissolved in water. • NaOH (s)  Na+ (aq) + OH- (aq)

  15. What is an acid?Is an alkali (OH or H)Give a use of an acid

  16. pH scale • An Indicator is a dye that changes colour • Indicators can be used to find out whether a solution is acid, alkaline or neutral • Universal Indicator can be used to find the pH of a solution • Acid – red, pH less than 7 • Neutral – green, pH = 7 • Alkali – blue, pH greater than 7 pH scale

  17. Universal Indicator and the pH scale 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Strong acid Strong alkali Neutral Universal Indicator is a mixture of liquids that will produce a range of colours to show how strong the acid or alkali is: 0-14 0 Stomach acid Lemon juice Water Soap Baking powder Oven cleaner

  18. pH scale pH scale

  19. pH scale pH scale

  20. pH scale pH scale

  21. Practical 1 • Test chemicals to find pH • Use paper and liquid • Record results in a table

  22. Neutralisation • Acids react with alkaline solutions to form a salt and water • Hydrochloric acid produces chlorides • Nitric acid produces nitrates • Sulphuric acid produces sulphates • Ammonia can dissolve in water to produce an alkaline solution. This can be neutralised with acids to produce ammonium salts • Indicators can monitor neutralisation reactions Neutralisation

  23. Neutralisation Acid + alkali Salt + water Acid + base Salt + water E.g. hydrochloric acid + sodium hydroxide sodium chloride + water An acid and alkali will neutralise each other (if the correct amounts are used):

  24. Neutralisation • Acids and bases neutralise each other. • Acids form H+ (aq) ions in water • Alkalis form OH- (aq) ions in water • Acid + alkali  salt + water • H+ + OH-  H2O • The other parts form the salt.

  25. Neutralisation – Hydrochloric acid Neutralisation

  26. Neutralisation – Sulphuric acid Neutralisation

  27. Neutralisation – Nitric acid Neutralisation

  28. Questions • Write a word equation for adding hydrochloric acid to magnesium hydroxide • Extension : Write a balanced symbol equation for this reaction (difficult) Hint • Mg(OH)2 • MgCl2

  29. Answers • Acid + base  salt + water • Hydrochloric acid + Magnesium hydroxide  magnesium chloride and water • 2HCl + Mg(OH)2MgCl2+2H2O

  30. Neutralisation – Fertiliser Neutralisation

  31. Practical 2 • Titrations and neutralisation

  32. Useful acid-alkali reactions 1) Hydrochloric acid is used in the stomach to help _______. If we eat too many “rich” foods our stomachs create too much ____ – this is called ______. This acid needs to be neutralised by taking indigestion tablets. 2) Soil is naturally acidic, mainly due to acid ____. This can have bad effects on ____ and vegetable growth, so the excess acid may need to be neutralised with an _____ . Words – plant, digestion, indigestion, alkali, rain, acid

  33. Quiz on acids and alkalis Acid, alkali or both??? • This a pH of less than 7 • This would turn Universal indicator green • This is often used in cleaners or soap • This would turn Universal Indicator red • Sodium hydroxide is a common ____________ • This would feel soapy on your skin • This could be a corrosive • This will turn universal indicator purple • This would taste sour • Lemon juice and vinegar are examples of weak _____

  34. Acids and metals • Acid + metal  Salt + hydrogen

  35. Metals and acids • The more reactive the metal, the faster the reaction • The speed of reaction is indicated by the rate at which bubbles of hydrogen are produced. • Test for hydrogen???? • Name of salt depends on metal and acid used

  36. Reaction of Metals and Acid Reaction of Metals and Acid

  37. Hydrochloric acid • Produces Chloride salts • Magnesium + Hydrochloric acid Magnesium Chloride + ________ • _______ + Aluminium +Aluminium Chloride + __________ • ________+ ________  Zinc chloride + _________

  38. Hydrochloric acid • Produces Chloride salts • Magnesium + Hydrochloric acid Magnesium Chloride + hydrogen • Hydrochloric acid + Aluminium +Aluminium Chloride + hydrogen • Hydrochloric acid+ zinc  Zinc chloride + hydrogen

  39. Symbol equations • 2HCl + Mg  MgCl2 +H2 • ____HCl + 2Al  2AlCl3 + 3H2 • 2____ + ____ZnCl2 + H2

  40. Symbol equations • 2HCl + Mg  MgCl2 +H2 • 2HCl + 2Al  2AlCl3 + 3H2 • 2HCl + ZnZnCl2 + H2

  41. Sulfuric acid reactions • H2SO4 + ______ MgSO4 + H2 • 3H2SO4 + 2Al  Al2(SO4)3 + 3H2 • H2SO4 +Zn  ZnSO4 + H2 • Copy and complete write a word equation for each.

  42. Sulfuric acid reactions • H2SO4 + Mg MgSO4 + H2 • 3H2SO4 + 2Al  Al2(SO4)3 + 3H2 • H2SO4 +Zn  ZnSO4 + H2 • Sulfuric acid + magnesium  Magnesium sulfate + hydrogen

  43. Nitric acid • Nitric acid reacts with alkalis, but when reacting with metals it can produce nitrogen oxides.

  44. Metal Oxides & Hydroxides • Transition metal oxides and hydroxides do not dissolve in water. They are called bases • They react with acids to produce salts that are soluble • The excess metal oxide can be filtered off Metal Oxides & Hydroxides

  45. Metal hydroxide • Metal hydroxide + acid  salt + water

  46. Metal oxide • Metal oxide + acid  salt + water

  47. Adding acid to carbonates Calcium carbonate + hydrochloric acid calcium chloride + carbon dioxide + water CaCO3(s) + HCl(aq) CaCl2(aq) + CO2(g) + H2O(l) Carbonates are compounds containing carbon and oxygen. When an acid is added to a carbonate the carbonate starts to fizz. A gas called _________ _______ is produced. 2

  48. Metal carbonate • Metal carbonate + acid  water + salt + carbon dioxide

  49. Quiz Quiz

More Related