·
The term acid means sour. Acids are substances that produce
H+ ions when they dissolve in water. Their formulas start with H and the
suffixes are –ic or –ous. An acid can donate a proton. The chemical that remains after the proton is donated is a base.
Formula
|
Name
|
Strong?
|
HCl
|
hydrochloric acid
|
yes
|
HBr
|
hydrobromic acid
|
yes
|
HI
|
hydroiodic acid
|
yes
|
HF
|
hydrofluoric acid
|
no
|
HNO3
|
nitric acid
|
yes
|
H2SO4
|
sulfuric acid
|
yes
|
H3PO4
|
phosphoric acid
|
no
|
CH3COOH
|
acetic acid
|
no
|
·
Bases are ionic
compounds that dissociate into a metal ion and hydroxide ions (OH-) when they
dissolve in water. Their formulas end with OH and that last word in the formula
is hydroxide.
Formula
|
Name
|
Strong?
|
NaOH
|
sodium hydroxide
|
yes
|
LiOH
|
lithium hydroxide
|
yes
|
KOH
|
potassium hydroxide
|
yes
|
Mg(OH)2
|
magnesium hydroxide
|
no
|
Ca(OH)2
|
calcium hydroxide
|
no
|
Al(OH)3
|
Aluminum hydroxide
|
no
|
·
When a base accepts a
proton, it becomes an acid because it now has a proton that it can donate. And
when an acid donates a proton it becomes a base, because it now has room to
accept a proton.
original
acid
|
conjugate
base
|
HNO3
|
NO3-
|
H2O
|
OH-
|
H3O+
|
H2O
|
H2SO4
|
HSO4-
|
HBr
|
Br
-
|
HCO3-
|
CO32-
|
original
base
|
conjugate
acid
|
OH-
|
H2O
|
H2O
|
H3O+
|
HCO3-
|
H2CO3
|
SO42-
|
HSO4-
|
ClO4-
|
HClO4
|
·
When an acid gives up
its proton, what remains is called the conjugate base of that acid. When a base
accepts a proton, the resulting chemical is called the conjugate acid of that
original base. HF and F- are a conjugate acid-base pair. H2O
and H3O+ are a conjugate pair, where H3O+
is the acid and H2O is the base.
equation
|
H2SO4
+ H2O HSO4-
+ H3O+
|
HCl
+ OH- Cl-
+ H2O
|
HCl
+ NH3 Cl-
+ NH4+
|
NH3
+ H2O NH4+
+ OH-
|
·
The strength of an acid or a base in water is
determined by its ability to donate or accept protons.
·
Strong acids are examples of strong
electrolytes because they donate protons so easily that their disassociation in
water in virtually complete. Weak acids don’t donate as many protons.
·
Most acids are weak acids, which mean that they
are also weak electrolytes. They disassociate slightly in water, which means
that only a small percentage of the dissolved molecules donate H+ to H 2O.
·
Citric acid is a weak acid found in fruits and
fruit juices such as lemons, oranges, and grapefruit.
·
Vinegar contains another weak acid known as
lactic acid.
·
As strong electrolytes, the Arrhenius bases are
strong bases that disassociate virtually completely in water. Because these
strong bases are ionic compounds, they disassociate in water to give an aqueous
solution of a metal ion and hydroxide ion. Strong bases accept protons readily.
·
Weak bases are weak electrolytes that are poor
acceptors of protons and produce very few ions in solution. A typical weak
base, ammonia, NH3, is used in cleaning products. In an aqueous
solution of NH3, only a few molecules accept protons to form
ammonium hydroxide.
·
Water acts as an acid or a base. It is a base
when one water molecule donates an H+ to another water molecule.
·
When acid mixes with H2O it ALWAYS makes H3O and
the H comes off of the front of the acid formula.
·
When writing formulas for acids- check the
polyatomic table, as many acids come from this, and the H can be added to it
and the numbers switched if need be.
·
When asked to write the formula and name of the
conjugate base for an acid, take out the H and add –ide.
o
HF = F-, fluoride ion
o
H2O = OH-, hydroxide ion
o
H2CO3 = HCO3,
bicarbonate ion
·
Every time a H+ is transferred between two water
molecules, the products are one H3O and one OH-. Experiments have
determined that, in pure water, the concentrations of H3O+ and OH- at 25C are
each 1.0 X 10-7 M.
·
Square brackets around the symbols indicate
their concentrations in moles per liter (M). [H3O+] = [OH-] = 1.0 X 10-7
M.
·
When we multiply these concentrations, we obtain
the ion-product constant of water, Kw, which is 1.0 X 10-14.
The concentration units are omitted in the Kw value.
·
The Kw value of 1.0 X 10-14
is important because it applies to any aqueous solution: all aqueous solutions
have H3O+ and OH-.
·
No matter the amount of acid and base, it always
equals 1 X 10-14
·
Any aqueous solution that’s an acid, base, or
neutral, the product is equal to Kw.
·
On the pH scale, a number between 0 and 14
represents the H3O+ concentration for most solutions.
·
A neutral solution has a pH of 7.0 [H3O+] = 1 X 10-7
·
An acidic
solution has a pH < 7.0 [H3O+]
> 1 X 10-7
·
A basic solution has a pH > 7.0 [H3O+] < 1 X 10-7
·
pH =
-log[H3O+]
·
The negative powers of 10 in the molar
concentrations are converted to positive numbers. For example 1 X 10-3
has a pH of 3.
·
Because the pH is a log scale, a change of one
pH unit corresponds to a ten-fold change in [H3O+]. For example, a solution
with a pH of 2 has a [H3O+] 10 times higher than a solution with a pH of 3 and
100 times higher that a solution with a pH of 4.
·
As the pH decreases as the [H3O+]
increases.
·
Typical reactions of acids and bases include the
reactions of acids with metals, bases, and carbonate or bicarbonate ions.
·
Acids react with certain metals to produce
hydrogen gas (H2) and a salt, which is an ionic compound that does
not contain H+ or OH-.
·
Neutralization is a reaction between an acid and a base to produce a salt and water. In
the reaction, the H+ of an acid that can be strong or weak and the OH- of a
strong base combine to form water as one product. The salt that is usually
soluble is the cation from the base and the anion from the acid.
·
****Watch for
polyatomics!!!************************When the elements combine don’t forget to
switch their number according to the periodic table***************************
·
In a neutralization reaction, one H+ always
combines with one OH-.
·
Writing the balanced equation for the reaction
of HCl
o
Al:
§
Write the reactants and products: when a metal
reacts with an acid, the products are H2 gas and a salt.
Al + HCl à H2
+ salt
§
Determine the formula of the salt: when Al
dissolves, it forms Al3+, which is balanced by 3 Cl- from HCl.
Al + HCl à H2
+ AlCl3
§
Balance the equation
2Al + 6HCl à
3H2 + 2AlCl3
·
When a carbonate (CO3) reacts with an acid, the products are CO2,
H2O, and a salt (GAS + WATER + SALT)
o
K2CO3 + HCL à CO2 + H2O
+ KCl
o
*****Whenever you see CO3 in a
balancing problem, automatically take out CO2 and H2O
first, then figure out the rest.
·
When H is combined with (OH) it
makes water (H2O)
·
Titration is used to find the molarity of a
solution in which we neutralize an acid sample with a known amount of base.
·
A buffer is a solution that maintains pH by
neutralizing added acid or base. For example, blood contains buffers that
maintain a constant pH of 7.4.
·
Buffers consist of nearly equal concentrations
of a weak acid and it’s conjugate base or a weak base and it’s conjugate acid.
·
To indicate whether a solution is acidic, basic,
or neutral (calculating the pH):
o
Of a
solution [H3O+] : –log (place the scientific notation problem here)
= <7 is acidic, >7 is basic, =7 is neutral
o
Of a solution [OH-]: first divide the solution
problem into (10-14), then use the –log formula to complete it
§
[OH-] = 8.0 X 10-3 M
·
(10-14)/(8.0 X 10-3) =
1.25 X 10-12; -log (1.25 X 10-12) = 11.9
·
If the pH is given, the [H3O+] is 1 X
10pH
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