1 / 35

Equilibrium – Acids and Bases

Equilibrium – Acids and Bases. Review of Acids and Bases. Arrhenius Theory of Acids and Bases An acid is a substance that dissociates in water to produce one or more hydrogen ions (H + ) A base is a substance that dissociates in water to form one or more hydroxide ions. (OH - ) Examples:

heidi
Download Presentation

Equilibrium – 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. Equilibrium – Acids and Bases

  2. Review of Acids and Bases • Arrhenius Theory of Acids and Bases • An acid is a substance that dissociates in water to produce one or more hydrogen ions (H+) • A base is a substance that dissociates in water to form one or more hydroxide ions. (OH-) • Examples: • Acid:HCl(aq)H+(aq) + Cl-(aq) • Base: LiOHLi+(aq) + OH-(aq)

  3. Limitations: • Classified based on chemical formula • Some substances do not have OH- in their chemical formulas but still yield OH- when they react with water. E.g. NH3 (ammonia) • Solution?

  4. Bronsted-Lowry Theory of Acids and Bases • An acid is a proton (H+) donor and must have H in its formula. • A base is a proton acceptor and must have a lone pair of electrons to form a bond with H+

  5. Two molecules or ions that are related by the transfer of a proton are called a conjugate acid-base pair. • Conjugate acid of a base is the particle that results when the base receives the proton from the acid. • Conjugate base of the acid is the particle that results when the acid donates a proton.

  6. Practice • Identify the conjugate acid/base pairs in the following: NH3(aq) + H2O(l)  NH4+(ag) + OH-(aq)

  7. Amphiprotic: Can act as either an acid or a base i.e has both a lone pair and an H-atom • Ex: H2O HCO3-(aq)) + H2O(l)  H2CO3(aq) + OH-(aq) HCO3-(aq) + H2O(l)  CO32-(aq) + H3O+(aq)

  8. Strong Acids and Bases • Completely dissociate in water into their ions (quantitative reactions) 100% HCl(aq) + H2O(aq) H3O+(aq) + Cl-(aq) 100% LiOH+ H2O(aq)LiOH(aq) + OH-(aq)

  9. As a result the [H3O+] in a solution of a strong acid is equal to the concentration of the acid. • Strong acids include HClO4 (perchloric), HI, HBr, HCl, H2SO4 (sulfuric), and HNO3 (nitric) • Strong bases include all oxides and hydroxides of alkali metals as well as alkaline earth metal oxides and hydroxides below beryllium. • The stronger the acid, the weaker it’s conjugate base and vice versa

  10. Weak Acids and Bases • Do NOTcompletely dissociate in water into their ions 1% CH3COOH(aq) + H2O(aq)↔ H3O+(aq) + CH3COO-(aq) 1% NH3(aq) + H2O(aq) ↔ NH4+(aq) + OH-(aq) • As a result, the concentration [H3O+] in a solution of a weak acid is always less than the concentration of the dissolved acid.

  11. Percent Ionization • % Ionization for strong acids is 100% • % Ionization for weak acids is < 100%

  12. Polyprotic Acids • Monoprotic acids contain only a single hydrogen ion that can dissociate. • Example: HCl • Polyprotic acids contain more than one hydrogen ions that can dissociate. • Example H2SO4, H3PO4

  13. Autoionization of Water • Water dissociates: H2O(l) + H2O(l) <--> H3O+(aq) + OH-(aq) What is the equilibrium constant (K) of this reaction? Kw = [H3O+][OH-] Kw is the ion product constant of water Kw = 1.0 x 10-14 @ SATP

  14. [H3O+] > [OH-]  acidic • [H3O+] < [OH-]  basic • [H3O+] = [OH-]  neutral

  15. Practice • There is a 0.25 mol/L solution of HBr(aq) • Calculate the hydrogen ion concentration • Calculate the hydroxide ion concentration • Strong acid – ionizes completely • Kw = [H3O+][OH-] = Kw = 1.0 x 10-14

  16. Practice • In a 0.13 mol/L solution of NaOH, what is the [H+] and [OH-]? • NaOH is hydroxide of an alkali metal so it is a STRONG base meaning [OH-]= [base] • Kw = [H3O+][OH-] = Kw = 1.0 x 10-14

  17. The pH Scale • Measures the acidity of a solution. • Measure [H+] in a solution. • Ranges from 0 to 14 • Distilled water is 7 (neutral) • Acids < 7 • Bases > 7 • A logarithmic scale • A pH of 1 is ten times more acidic then a pH of 2

  18. pH equations • pH = -log[H3O+] • [H3O+] = 10-pH • pOH = -log[OH-] • [OH-] = 10-pOH • pH + pOH = 14

  19. Practice • Calculate the pH of a solution of 1.24 x 10-4 M HCl • pH = -log[H3O+] • pH = -log[1.24 x 10-4 mol/L] • pH = 3.91

  20. Practice • If the normal pH of blood is 7.3, then find the pOH, [H3O+] and [OH-] • pH + pOH = 14 • 7.3 + pOH = 14 • pOH = 6.7 • [H3O+] = 10-pH • [H3O+] = 10-7.3 • [H3O+] = 5 x 10-8 • [OH-] = 10-pOH • [OH-] = 10-6.7 • [OH-] = 2 x 10-7

  21. Acid- Base Strength & Dissociation • Recall:Strongacids and bases dissociate quantitatively (>99.9%) in water • Weakacids and bases dissociate partiallyin water • When a weak acid or base is added to water dynamic equilibrium is established

  22. The Acid-Dissociation Constant, Ka For Weak Acids: All concentrations are those at equilibrium Note: the smaller the value of Ka, the weaker the acid

  23. Determine the Ka of propanoic acid (C2H5COOH(aq)) given that a 0.10 mol/L solution has a pH of 2.96. (Hint: use an ICE table) [H3O+] = 10-pH [H3O+] = 10-2.96 [H3O+] =0.00110 C2H5COOH(aq) CH3COO- + H3O+ I 0.10 mol/L o mol/L 0 mol / L C -x +x +x E

  24. The Base-Ionization Constant, Kb For Weak Bases: All concentrations are those at equilibrium Note: the smaller the value of Kb, the weaker the base

  25. Calculate the pH of a 3.6 X 10-3 mol/L solution of quinine (C20H24N2O2(aq)). Kb = 3.3 X 10-6 C20H24N2O2(aq)+ H2O  HC20H24N2O2 + + OH- I C E

  26. Relationship between Ka, Kb, & Kw Example: Consider acid HCN and conjugate base CN- HCN(aq) + H2O(l) H3O+(aq) + CN- (aq) Ka = [H3O+] [CN -] [HCN] Kb = [HCN] [OH -] [CN-] Ka Kb = [H3O+] [CN -][HCN] [OH -] [HCN] [CN-] Ka Kb = [H3O+] [OH -] Ka Kb = Kw

  27. Practice • The Kb for hydrazine, N2H4(g), a rocket fuel, is 1.7 x 10-6. What is the Ka of its conjugate acid, N2H5 (aq)? • KaKb = Kw • Ka(1.7 x 10-6)= 1.0 x 10-14 • Ka= 6.0 x 10-9

  28. Practice • Chloracetic acid, HC2H2O2Cl(aq) is a weak acid. Determine the pH of a 0.0100 mol/L solution of chloracetic acid if the Kb of the conjugate base is Kb= 7.35 x 10-12 . HC2H2O2Cl (aq) C2H2O2Cl- + H3O+ I C E • Ka Kb = Kw • Ka(7.35 x 10-12)= 1.0 x 10-14 • Ka=0.00136

  29. Neutralization Reactions • A salt is an ionic compound that results from a neutralization reaction • Acid + base  salt + water • Salts are strong electrolytes that completely ionize in water • Salts can affect the pH of a solution

  30. Neutral Salt Solutions • Strong acid + strong base • Both will dissociate completely • Therefore… • Salts containing an anion from a strong acid and cation from a strong base will be neutral • Ex: NaOH + HCl NaCl + H2O

  31. Acidic Salt Solutions • Strong acid + weak base • The acid dissociates completely, but the base only dissociates partially • Therefore… • Salts containing an anion from a strong acid and a cation from a weak base will be acidic • Ex: HCl + NH3  NH4Cl  NH4+ + Cl- • NH4+ will act as a weak acid

  32. Basic Salt Solutions • Weak acid + strong base • The base will dissociate completely but the acid will only dissociate partially • Therefore… • Salts containing an anion from a weak acid and a cation from a strong base will be basic • Ex: HC2H3O2 + NaOH NaC2H3O2 + H2O  Na+ + C2H3O2- • C2H3O2- will act as a weak base

  33. Buffers • Resist changes in pH when a moderate amount of acid or base is added • The acid and base components must not react in a neutralization reaction • Solutions of a weak acid and the salt of its conjugate base OR a weak base and the salt of its conjugate acid

  34. Acetic Acid/Sodium Acetate Buffer • Consider a buffered solution made by adding similar molar concentrations of acetic acid (CH3COOH) and its salt, sodium acetate (CH3COONa) • Sodium acetate ionizes completely in water: • When an acid is added to the buffer, the acetate ion reacts with the hydronium ion to neutralize the solution • When a base is added to the buffer, the acetic acid reacts with the hydroxide ions to neutralize the solution

  35. Buffer Examples • It is extremely important for blood to remain near it’s optimal pH of 7.4 • Any change greater than 0.2 is life-threatening • If the blood were not buffered, the acid absorbed by consuming a glass of orange juice would probably kill you

More Related