1 / 27

Acids & Bases

Acids & Bases. Chapter 15 & 16. Acids. Have a sour taste Affect indicators React with bases to produce salt & water Conduct an electric current Examples include salad dressing, rainwater, car batteries, & soft drinks. Bases. Taste bitter Feel slippery Affect indicators

Télécharger la présentation

Acids & Bases

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. Acids & Bases Chapter 15 & 16

  2. Acids • Have a sour taste • Affect indicators • React with bases to produce salt & water • Conduct an electric current • Examples include salad dressing, rainwater, car batteries, & soft drinks

  3. Bases • Taste bitter • Feel slippery • Affect indicators • React with acids to produce salt & water • Conduct an electric current • Examples include soap, baking soda, & drain cleaners

  4. Solutions of acids & bases • The amounts of hydrogen ions (H+) & hydroxide ions (OH-) determine whether a solution is acidic, basic, or neutral. • Acidic solutions contain more H+ than OH- • Basic solutions contain more OH- than H+ • Neutral solutions contain equal amounts

  5. Arrhenius model • In 1883, Svante Arrhenius proposed the Arrhenius model of acids & bases to explain how pure water could become acidic or basic.

  6. Arrhenius model • According to the Arrhenius model • An acid is a substance that contains hydrogen & ionizes to produce H+ in solution HClO4 H+ + ClO4- • A base is a substance that contains a hydroxide group & ionizes to produce OH- in solution NaOH  Na+ + OH-

  7. Bronsted-Lowry Model • Johannes Bronsted & Thomas Lowry proposed a better model for acids & bases that focuses on the role of the proton, or H+. • According to the Bronsted-Lowry model: • An acid donates a proton, or H+ • A base accepts a proton, or H+

  8. Explanation When an acid, HX, dissolves in water, it donates a H+ to a water molecule. The water acts as a base & accepts the H+. HX + H2O H3O+ + X- On accepting the H+, the water becomes an acid, H3O+. The hydronium is an acid because it has an extra H+ it can donate. On donating its H+, the acid becomes a base, X-. The reaction can also occur in the reverse direction.

  9. Conjugates • The products of an acid-base reaction are known as the conjugate acid-base pair. • The conjugate acid is the species produced when a base accepts a H+ from an acid. • The conjugate base is the species that results when an acid donates an H+ to a base.

  10. ProblemLabel the acid, base, conjugate acid, & conjugate base in each of the reactions.HF + H2O H3O+ + F-NH3 + H2O NH4+ + OH-

  11. Amphoteric:substances, like water, that can act as acids or bases

  12. Strong Acids • Strong acids are acids that ionize completely in solution. HCl + H2O  H3O+ + Cl- • Strong acids: HCl HBr HI HClO4 HNO3 H2SO4

  13. Weak Acids • Weak acids are acids that ionize only partially in solution. • All other acids are weak acids HC2H3O2 + H2O H3O+ + C2H3O2- • In the reaction, the acetic acid does not ionize completely & some of the acetic acid ions remain in molecular form in the solution.

  14. Cont’d… • The double arrow in the reaction means the reaction is an equilibrium reaction. • The equilibrium constant expression is written by placing the concentration of the product in the numerator & the concentration of the reactants in the denominator. • Water is a constant so it is not added to the expression. • Ka is the acid ionization constant. • The weaker the acid, the smaller the Ka. • The stronger the acid, the larger the Ka.

  15. Strong & Weak Bases • The same application that apply for acids, apply for bases except using OH-. • Strong bases ionize completely in solution • Weak bases ionize only partially in solution. • The equilibrium equation for bases use the base ionization constant, Kb. • The strong bases are: NaOH KOH Ca(OH)2 RbOH CsOH Ba(OH)2

  16. Water • Water always ionizes itself a little. H2O H+ + OH- • This gives us a special constant that applies to the self-ionization of water. Kw= [H+][OH-] Kw is the ion product constant for water.

  17. Cont’d… • In pure water at 298K, [H+] & [OH-] always equal 1.0x10-7 M. • Therefore, Kw= (1.0x10-7)(1.0x10-7) Kw= 1.0x10-14 • You can use Kw to calculate the concentration of either ion if you know the concentration of the other.

  18. ProblemUsing the ion product constant for water, calculate [OH-] if [H+]= 3.0x10-2 M

  19. pH scale • Chemists use a pH scale to express hydrogen ion concentrations. pH= -log [H+] • pH means the power of hydrogen • pH ranges from 0 to 14 • 0 to 7 is acidic • 7 to 14 is basic • 7 is neutral • pH decreases as [H+] increases

  20. pOH scale • Chemists can also use the pOH scale to express the basicity, or alkalinity, of a solution. pOH= -log [OH-] • pOH ranges from 0 to 14 • 0 to 7 is basic • 7 to 14 is acidic • 7 is neutral

  21. A chemist can calculate pH or pOH if the other is known using:pH + pOH = 14.00

  22. Problems Calculate pH. • [H+]= 1.0x10-2 M • [H+]= 3.0x10-6 M • [OH-]= 8.2x10-6 M • [OH-]= 4.3x10-4 M

  23. Neutralization • Occurs when an acid and a base react to form a salt & water HCl + NaOH NaCl + H2O

  24. Titration • The process of determining the concentration of an unknown solution by dripping, or titrating, a known strong acid or base into it • If the unknown solution is acidic, we titrate the solution with a strong base of a known concentration.

  25. Steps to Titration • An indicator is a chemical dye added to the solution whose color is affected by acidic or basic solutions.

  26. Cont’d… • As you add the acid or base to the unknown solution, pH slowly rises. • When the acid is neutralized, pH rises rapidly & the indicator in the solution changes color. • The color change is called the end point.

More Related