1 / 10

Historical Development of Acid/Base Theories

Historical Development of Acid/Base Theories. Year 12 Chemistry. Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794). He classified all chemicals into three categories – acids, bases and salts He believed that all acids contained oxygen and it was this that gave them their sour taste

odele
Télécharger la présentation

Historical Development of Acid/Base Theories

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. Historical Development of Acid/Base Theories Year 12 Chemistry

  2. Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794) • He classified all chemicals into three categories – acids, bases and salts • He believed that all acids contained oxygen and it was this that gave them their sour taste • Flaw: not all acids contain oxygen and metal oxides form bases

  3. Humphrey Davy (1778-1829) • Showed that all acids do not contain oxygen • Proposed that acids are hydrogen containing materials following the discovery of HCl • Flaw: not all substances that contain hydrogen are acids

  4. Svante Arrhenius (1859-1927) • Acids dissociate in water forming H+ as one product • Bases dissociate in water forming OH- as one product • Neutralisation involves the reaction of H+ and OH- forming a salt in water • Flaws: • theories only apply to aqueous solutions • Some substances such as NH3 are bases and do not contain OH- • Relative strengths not addressed • Amphoteric substances not addressed

  5. Bronsted-Lowry (~1923) • An acid is a proton (H+) donor • A base is a proton acceptor • Examples: • HCl + H2O <===> H3O+ + Cl¯ • NH3 + H2O <===> NH4+ + OH¯ Identify the acids/bases Any other acids/bases?

  6. Bronsted-Lowry • Amphiprotic substances are those that can act as bases and acids • Water is an obvious example Notice in the previous slide that water reacts with both acids and bases. Bisulfate is another amphiprotic substance. Construct chemical equations to show this property.

  7. Bronsted-Lowry (conjugates) • Acid 1 + Base 2  Base 1 + Acid 2 • What does this mean? • An acid reacts and forms a conjugate base which can also accept a proton • A base reacts and forms a conjugate acid which can donate a proton • Conjugate pairs differ only by one H+ Conjugate pair 1 Conjugate pair 2

  8. Bronsted-Lowry (conjugates) • Example: • HNO3 + H2O <===> H3O+ + NO3¯ Here, nitric acid and the nitrate ion are conjugates and water and the hydronium ion are also conjugates

  9. Bronsted-Lowry (equilibrium) • Predicting Equilibrium • The direction of acid-base equilibria is away from the stronger acid base side and towards the weaker acid base side • The stronger the acid, the weaker its conjugate base • The stronger the base, the weaker its conjugate acid

  10. Bronsted-Lowry (equilibrium) • Reactions that proceed to a large extent: • A strong acid will force the equilibrium in the opposite direction (in this case, forward or right) • HCl + H2O <===> H3O+ + Cl¯ • Reactions that proceed to a small extent: • If the weaker of the two acids and the weaker of the two bases are reactants (appear on the left side of the equation), the reaction is said to proceed to only a small extent: • NH3 + H2O <===> NH4+ + OH¯ • Identify the conjugate acid base pairs in each reaction.

More Related