1 / 23

Acids and Bases

Acids and Bases. A Short Introduction. Acids and Bases Are Everywhere. Look around you and every liquid you see will probably be either an acid or a base. The only exception would be distilled water. Distilled water is just water. That's it.

thane
Télécharger la présentation

Acids and 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 and Bases A Short Introduction

  2. Acids and Bases Are Everywhere • Look around you and every liquid you see will probably be either an acid or a base. • The only exception would be distilled water. Distilled water is just water. That's it. • Most water you drink has ions in it. It is those ions (H+ or OH-) which make something acidic or basic.

  3. Acids and Bases Are Everywhere • In your body there are small compounds called Amino Acids. Those are acids. • In fruits there is something called Citric Acid. That’s an acid too. • When you put baking soda in water it makes a base. • Vinegar is an acid. It is a weak solution of Acetic Acid in water.

  4. pH Scale • Scientists use something called the "pH" scale to measure how acidic or basic a liquid is. • The scale goes from “1" to "14". Distilled water is 7 (right in the middle).

  5. pH Scale • Acids are found between “1" and “6". Bases are from “8" to "14". • Most of the liquids you find every day have a pH near "7", either a little below, or a little above. • When you start looking at the pH of chemicals the numbers go to the extremes. • If you ever go into a chemistry lab, you could find solutions with a pH of "1" and others with a pH of "14". Those chemicals are very dangerous.

  6. The name acid comes from the Latin word acidus, which means “sour”. When dissolved in water, acids have a sour taste. Acids cause the dye in litmus paper to change from blue to red. Water solutions of base feel slippery or soapy to the touch. When fatty substances are placed in a base solution, they dissolve. Bases cause the dye in litmus to change from red to blue. Household cleaning products contain a base. A Quick Comparison of Acids and Bases ACID BASE

  7. What Really Happens? A Little Tricky, but Here Comes the Straight Answer.

  8. Acid Vs. Base Acids are compounds which break into hydrogen (H+) ions and another compound when placed in an aqueous solution (water). Bases are compounds which break up into hydroxide (OH-) ions and another compound when placed in an aqueous solution (water).

  9. One More Time… • If you have an IONIC compound and you put it in water it will break apart into two ions. • If one of those ions is H+ … The solution is acidic. • If one of the ions is OH- … The solution is basic. • There are other ions which make acidic and basic solutions, but we won’t be talking about them here.

  10. pH Scale… One More Time • The pH scale we talked about is actually a measure of the number of H+ ions in a solution. • If there are a lot of H+ ions, the pH is very low. • If there are a lot of OH- ions, that means the number of H+ ion is very low, so the pH is high.

  11. Vocabulary to Know • ACID = a solution that has an excess of H+ ions. • BASE = A solution that has an excess of OH- ions. Another word for base is ALKALI. • AQUEOUS = A solution which is mainly water. Think of the word aquarium. • STRONG ACID = An acid which has a very low pH (1-4). • STRONG BASE = A base which has a very high pH (11-14).

  12. More Vocabulary to Know • WEAK ACID = An acid that only partially ionizes in an aqueous solution. That means not every molecule breaks apart. They usually have a pH close to 7 (5-6). • WEAK BASE = A base that only partially ionizes in an aqueous solution. That means not every molecule breaks apart. They usually have a pH close to 7 (8-10). • NEUTRAL = A solution which has a pH of 7. It is neither acidic or basic.

  13. Examples of Acids and Bases

  14. Examples of Acids and Bases H2SO4 (Sulfuric Acid) HCl (Hydrochloric Acid) HC2H3O2 (Acetic Acid) HNO3 (Nitric Acid) NaOH (Sodium Hydroxide) KOH (Potassium Hydroxide)

  15. Acid-Base Indicators • An acid-base indicator is a weak acid or a weak base. • Indicators are substances that change color depending on whether the solution is acid or alkaline. • You need to know the names and colors of some common indicators.

  16. Acid-Base Indicators • An indicator does not change color from pure acid to pure alkaline (basic) at specific hydrogen ion concentration, but rather, color change occurs over a range of hydrogen ion concentrations. • This range is termed the color change interval. It is expressed as a pH range.

  17. Common Indicators • Litmus,redin acid solution,blue in alkaline solution. • Phenolphthalein, colorless in acid solution,pinkin alkaline solution. • Universal indicator, has a range of colors depending on the strength of the acid or alkali.

  18. pH Numbers of ‘Everyday’ Substances • Dilute hydrochloric acid, 1.5 • Lemon juice, 2.5 • Orange juice, 3.5 • Pure water, 7.0 • Blood, 7.5 • Milk of magnesia, 10.5 • Dilute sodium hydroxide, 13.0

  19. It’s Your Turn! Were You Sleeping on the Job?

  20. Quick Quiz • A substance that exhibits a sour taste. • A substance that exhibits a bitter taste. • A substance that reacts with metals to produce hydrogen gas. • A substance that feels slippery to the touch because it dissolves the surface of the skin.

  21. Quick Quiz Continued • A substance that has a pH of greater than 7. • A substance that has a pH of less than 7. • A substance which turns blue litmus paper red or cause no change to red litmus paper. • A substance which turns red litmus paper blue or cause no change to blue litmus paper.

  22. That’s basically it. (Ha Ha, get it?)

More Related