1 / 20

Chapter 17

Chapter 17. Common Ion Effect. Drill. Use AP Review Drill # 50-53. Objectives. SWBAT Complete Common Ion Effect calculations. Explain how the Common Ion Effect is a special case of Le Chatelier’s Principle. Common Ion Effect. The Common Ion Effect

epat
Download Presentation

Chapter 17

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. Chapter 17 Common Ion Effect

  2. Drill • Use AP Review Drill # 50-53

  3. Objectives • SWBAT • Complete Common Ion Effect calculations. • Explain how the Common Ion Effect is a special case of Le Chatelier’s Principle.

  4. Common Ion Effect • The Common Ion Effect is the shift in equilibrium caused by the addition of a compound having an ion in common with the dissolved substance.

  5. Uses of Common Ion Effect • The common ion effect plays an important role in determining: • the pH of a solution • and the solubility of a slightly soluble salt.

  6. The Common Ion Effect • When a salt, with the anion of a weak acid, is added to that acid the addition of the salt reverses the dissociation of the acid. • Acid Dissociation: • CH3COOH CH3COO -1 + H+1 • Salt that is added: • NaCH3COO CH3COO -1 + Na+1

  7. Common Ion Effect • Addition of the salt will increase the concentration of the CH3COO-1 ion. • Le Chatelier’s Principle says that the increased ion concentration will reverse the equilibrium reaction. This reversal decreases production of the products and increases production of the reactants.

  8. Equilibrium Special Case • You have probably realized that the Common Ion Effect is just a special case of Le Chatelier’s Principle.

  9. Common Ion Effect • Lowers the percent dissociation of the acid. (If the equilibrium shifts left, you produce less products.) • The same principle applies to salts with the cation of a weak base. • This is an “ICE BOX” problem with an exception. Now you have an initial concentration of the anion.

  10. Common Ion Effect Example • In this situation, the soluble salt of the weak acid's conjugate base simply provides a source of the conjugate base.

  11. Consider acetic acid in water: • HC2H3O2 (aq) ↔ H+ (aq) + C2H3O2- (aq) • Now, add NaC2H3O2, which dissociates completely, we increase the concentration of C2H3O2-1 (aq). • Le Chatelier's Principle : • the equilibrium will shift to the left (towards the reactants), causing • the [H+] to decrease, and therefore • the pH increases!

  12. Common Ion Effect • The common ion effect is the shift in equilibrium that occurs when an ion ALREADY PRESENT in the equilibrium reaction is added.

  13. EXAMPLE • If 0.100 moles of NaC2H3O2 are added to a 1.00 L of 0.100 M solution of acetic acid, HC2H3O2, what is the resultant pH ?

  14. STEP 1: Identify the major species in solution • HC2H3O2 (weak acid) • Na+1 (neither acidic nor basic which means it is a SPECTATOR ION) • C2H3O2-1 (conjugate base of weak acid) • H2O (very weak acid or base, amphoteric)

  15. STEP 2: Identify the important equilibrium reaction(s). In this case it is a reaction that involves both the weak acid and its conjugate base: HC2H3O2 (aq) ↔ H+ (aq) + C2H3O2-1 (aq)

  16. STEP 3: Make an I.C.E. table to determine the equilibrium concentrations of substances: HC2H3O2 (aq) ↔ H+ (aq) + C2H3O2-1 (aq) http://www.chem.ubc.ca/courseware/pH/section12/index.html

  17. STEP 4: Determine and solve the equilibrium constant expression: • Ka = ([H+][C2H3O2-1] / [HC2H3O2] ) • 1.8 x 10-5 = ([H+][C2H3O2-1] / [HC2H3O2] ) • 1.8 x 10-5 = ( x(0.100 + x) / (0.100 - x) ) • Use the 5% assumption. • 1.8 x 10-5 = ( x(0.100) / (0.100) ) • x = [H+] = 1.8 x 10-5

  18. STEP 5: Calculate the pH! • pH = -log(1.8 x 10-5) = 4.74 • The addition of a common ion can also affect the dissociation of a weak base in a similar manner. • See http://www.chem.ubc.ca/courseware/pH/section12/index.html for more information.

  19. Practice Problems • Try B&L #

  20. Wrap Up • How is the Common Ion Effect a special case of Le Chatelier’s Principle?

More Related