1 / 34

Ionic Equilibria (Acids and Bases)

Ionic Equilibria (Acids and Bases). Chapter 18. Phase I. STRONG ELECTROLYTES. Strong Electrolytes. Strong Acids – 7 strong acids Strong Bases – Group 1 and 2 (Ca, Sr, Ba) hydroxides Soluble Salts Some molecular compounds – requires extensive ionization. Calculating Ion Concentration.

janae
Download Presentation

Ionic Equilibria (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. Ionic Equilibria (Acids and Bases) Chapter 18

  2. Phase I STRONG ELECTROLYTES

  3. Strong Electrolytes • Strong Acids – 7 strong acids • Strong Bases – Group 1 and 2 (Ca, Sr, Ba) hydroxides • Soluble Salts • Some molecular compounds – requires extensive ionization

  4. Calculating Ion Concentration • Calculate the concentration of each ion and the pH in 0.050M HNO3 HNO3(aq) + H2O (l) H30+ (aq) + NO3-(aq) • Assume 100% dissociation (all strong electrolytes) • H30+ (aq) = 0.050M • NO3-(aq) = 0.050M • pH = -log(H30+) = -log(0.050) = 1.30

  5. Calculating Ion Concentration • Calculate the concentraion of ions and the pH of 0.020M Ba(OH)2 solution. Ba(OH)2 Ba2+ + 2OH- • Assume strong electrolyte = 100% dissociation • Ba2+ = 0.020M • OH- = 2(0.020M) = 0.040M • [OH-][H30+] = 1 x 10-14 • [H30+] = 2.5 x 10-13 • pH = -log(2.5 x 10-13) = 12.60

  6. Auto-ionization of Water 2H2O (l)  H3O+ (aq) + OH- (aq) Kc = [H3O+][OH-] *temp dependent Kc = Kw = [H3O+][OH-] = 1.0 x 10-14 @ 25oC Table 18-2 (p755) has values at different temperatures

  7. Auto-ionization of Water • Calculate the concentration of H3O+ and OH- in 0.050M HCl HCl + H2O  H3O+ + Cl- • H3O+ = 0.050M • [H3O+][OH-] = 1.0 x 10-14 • [0.050M][OH-] = 1.0 x 10-14 • [OH-] = 2.0 x 10-13

  8. Question • Why don’t we add in the concentration of H3O+ from the auto ionization of water? • Compare 10-7 to 0.50…no contest • So much H3O+ that equilibrium is pushed to H2O

  9. pH and pOH • pH and pOH express the acidity and basicity of dilute solutions

  10. Cool relationship between pH and pOH [H3O+][OH-] = 1.0 x 10-14 log[H3O+] + log[OH-] = log(1.0 x 10-14) and -log[H3O+] - log[OH-] = -log(1.0 x 10-14)  pH + pOH = 14.00

  11. Complete the Table BelowWhat are the ranges of pH and pOH?

  12. Example Problem • Calculate [H3O+] , pH, pOH, and [OH-] for 0.020M HNO3. HNO3 + H2O  H3O+ + NO3- • [H3O+] = [0.020] • pH = -log(0.020) = 1.70 • pOH = 14 – pH = 14 – 1.70 = 12.30 • [OH-] = 10-pOH = 10-12.30 = 5.0 x 10-13

  13. Phase II WEAK ELECTROLYTES

  14. Ionization of Weak Acids • The activity of water is assumed to be 1 as it is nearly a pure liquid with this weak ionization.

  15. Ionization of Weak Acids • Small ka = weak acid • Large ka = strong acid • Ionization constants are measured experimentally • Freezing point depression • Electrical conduction measurement • pH measurements

  16. Example • In a 0.12M solution of weak monoprotic acid (HA) is 5.0% dissociated, calculate ka. HA  H+ + A-

  17. Example • The pH of weak acid H is measured at 2.97 in a 0.10M solution. Calculate the Ka.

  18. Example • Calculate the concentration of all species in a 0.15M acetic acid solution if Ka = 1.8 x 10-5 • When x is <5% of the number being added or subtracted from the initial concentration, it may be NEGLECTED. • % Ionization = [CH3COOH ionized] [CH3COOH initial]

  19. Ionization of Weak Bases Review Appendix G, p. A-15

  20. Example • Calculate the concentration of various species in 0.15M NH3 and % Ionization.

  21. Example • An Ammonia solution has a pH of 11.37. Calculate its molarity.

  22. Polyprotic Acids • Acids with more than one proton • Most are considered weak acids, however the first proton ionizes the strongest • Typically 104 to 106 difference between Ka

  23. Example • H3AsO4, arsenic acid • Ka1 = 2.5 x 10-4 • Ka2 = 5.6 x 10-8 • Ka3 = 3.0 x 10-13 • Calculate the concentration of all species in 0.100M solution of H3AsO4.

  24. Solvolysis • Solvolysis – the reaction of a dissolved substance with a solvent • Hydrolysis – the reaction of a dissolved substance with WATER. • Generally, anions of STRONG acids do not hydrolyze • Generally, anions of WEAK acids do hydrolyze

  25. Solvolysis KCl + H2O  NR (no pH change) Neither K nor Cl will Hydrolyze (from strong sources) NaClO + H2O  HClO + Na+ + OH- • Anions of weak acids are relatively strong bases. • Kb = [HClO][OH-] [ClO-]

  26. Yet another scary math proof

  27. Solvolysis • Works for all conjugate acid/base pairs in water.

  28. Salts Where things get murkey Yay!

  29. Salts • Objective: • What happens to pH when I put a salt of a Strong Acid, Weak Acid, Strong Base, or Weak Base into water?

  30. Cation From: Strong Base (Na+) Na+ + H2O  NR No Effect Anion From: Strong Acid (Cl-) Cl- + H2O  NR No Effect Strong Acid and Strong Base

  31. Cation From: Strong Base (K+) K+ + H2O  NR No Effect Anion From: Weak Acid (ClO-) ClO- + H2O  HClO + OH- Increases pH Strong Base and Weak Acid

  32. Cation From: Weak Base (NH4+) NH4+ + H2O  H3O+ + NH3 Decreases pH Anion From: Strong Acid (NO3-) NO3- + H2O  NR No Effect Weak Base and Strong Acid

  33. Cation From: Weak Base (NH4+) NH4+ + H2O  H3O+ + NH3 Decreases pH Anion From: Weak Acid (ClO-) ClO- + H2O  HClO + OH- Increases pH Weak Base and Weak Acid

  34. Weak Base and Weak Acid • How do you know if the pH will increase or decrease? • If Kb = Ka, then pH = 0 • If Kb > Ka, then pH = + • If Kb < Ka, then pH = -

More Related