Title: Acids and Bases
1Acids and Bases
- Acids taste sour (citric acid, acetic acid)
- Bases taste bitter (sodium bicarbonate)
- There are 3 ways to define acids and bases, you
will learn 2 of these - Arrhenius
- - Acids form H3O in water (HCl H2O ? H3O
Cl-) - - Bases form OH- in water (NaOH ? Na OH-)
- Brønsted-Lowry (B-L)
- - Acids donate H and Bases accept H
- HCl NaOH ? H2O NaCl
- HCl is the acid, it donates H to OH- (the base)
2B-L Acids and Formation of H3O
- In an acid-base reaction, there is always an
acid/base pair (the acid donates H to the base) - H is not stable alone, so it will be transferred
from one covalent bond to another - Example formation of H3O from an acid in water
- HBr H2O ? H3O Br-
3Identifying B-L Acids and Bases
- Compare the reactants and the products
- - The reactant that loses an H is the acid
- - The reactant that gains an H is the base
- Examples
- HCl H2O ? H3O Cl-
- Acid HCl and Base H2O (HCl gives H2O an H)
- NH3 H2O ? NH4 OH-
- Acid H2O and Base NH3 (H2O gives NH3 an H)
- CH3CO2H NH3 ? CH3CO2- NH4
- Acid CH3CO2H and Base NH3 (CH3CO2H gives NH3
an H)
4Conjugate Acids and Bases
- When a proton is transferred from the acid to the
base (in a B-L acid/base reaction), a new acid
and a new base are formed - HA B ? A- HB
- acid base ? conjugate base conjugate
acid - The acid (HA) and the conjugate base (A-) that
forms when HA gives up an H are a conjugate
acid/base pair - The base (B) and the conjugate acid (HB) that
forms when B accepts an H are another conjugate
acid/base pair
5Identifying Conjugate Acid/Base Pairs
- Identify the acid and base for the reactants
- Identify the acid and base for the products
- Identify the conjugate acid/base pairs
- acid conjugate base
-
-
- base conjugate acid
HF
H3O
F-
H2O
6Acid and Base Strength
- Strong acids give up protons easily and
completely ionize in water - HCl H2O ? H3O Cl-
- Weak acids give up protons less easily and only
partially ionize in water - CH3CO2H H2O ? CH3CO2- H3O
- Strong bases have a strong attraction for H and
completely ionize in water - KOH(s) ? K (aq) OH-(aq)
- NaNH2 H2O ? NH3 NaOH
- Weak bases have a weak attraction for H and only
partially ionize in water - HS- H2O ? H2S OH-
7Direction of an Acid/Base Equilibrium
- In general, theres an inverse relationship
between acid/base strength within a conjugate
pair - - strong acid ? weak conjugate base
- - strong base ? weak conjugate acid
- (and vice-versa)
- The equilibrium always favors the direction that
goes from stronger acid to weaker acid - Example 1 HBr H2O ? H3O Br-
- stronger acid (HBr) ? weaker acid (H3O)
- (equilibrium favors products)
- Example 2 NH3 H2O ? NH4 OH-
- weaker acid (H2O) ? stronger acid (NH4)
- (equilibrium favors reactants)
8Dissociation Constants
- Since weak acids dissociate reversibly in water,
we can write an equilibrium expression - HA H2O ? H3O A-
- Keq H3OA-/HAH2O
- But, since H2O remains essentially constant we
can write - Ka Keq x H2O H3OA-/HA
- The acid dissociation constant (Ka) is a measure
of how much the acid dissociates (A higher Ka a
stronger acid) - Example CH3CO2H H2O ? CH3CO2- H3O
- Ka H3OCH3CO2-/CH3CO2H 1.8 x 10-5
- Can also write dissociation constants for weak
bases - NH3 H2O ? NH4 OH-
- Kb NH4OH-/NH3 1.8 x 10-5
9Ionization of Water
- Since H2O can act as either a weak acid or a weak
base, one H2O can transfer a proton to another
H2O - H2O H2O ? H3O OH-
- Keq H3OOH-/H2OH2O
- Since H2O is essentially constant, we can
write - Kw Keq x H2O2 H3OOH-
- (where Kw the ion-product constant for water)
- For pure water H3O OH- 1.0 x 10-7 M
- So, Kw H3OOH- (1.0 x 10-7 M)2 1.0 x
10-14 - (units are omitted for Kw as for Keq and Ka)
10Using Kw
- If acid is added to water, H3O goes up
- - for an acidic solution H3O gt OH-
- If base is added to water, OH- goes up
- - for a basic solution OH- gt H3O
- Kw is constant (1.0 x 10-14) for all aqueous
solutions - Can use Kw to calculate either H3O or OH- if
given the other concentration - Example if H3O 1.0 x 10-4 M, what is the
OH-? - Kw H3OOH-
- OH- Kw/ H3O 1.0 x 10-14/1.0 x 10-4 1.0
x 10-10 M - Is this an acidic or a basic solution?
- Since H3O gt OH-, its an acidic solution
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12The pH Scale
- pH is a way to express H3O in numbers that are
easy to work with - H3O has a large range (1.0 M to 1.0 x 10-14 M)
so we use a log scale - pH - log H3O
- The pH scale goes from 0 - 14
- Each pH unit a ten-fold change in H3O
- pH 7 neutral, pH lt 7 acidic, pH gt 7 basic
- Can use an indicator dye (on paper or in
solution) that changes color with changes in pH,
or a pH meter, to measure pH
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14Calculating pH and pOH
- Can calculate pH from H3O
- If H3O 1.0 x 10-3 M, what is the pH?
- pH - log H3O - log(1.0 x 10-3) 3.00
- Note sig. figs. in H3O decimal places in
pH - Can also calculate H3O from pH
- If pH is a whole number, H3O 1 x 10-pH
- So, if pH 2, then H3O 1 x 10-2
- Can calculate pOH from OH-
- pOH - logOH-
- Also, since Kw H3OOH-
- then pKw - log Kw - log (1.0 x 10-14)
14.00 - And, pKw pH pOH 14.00
- So, if pH 3.00, then pOH 14.00 - 3.00 11.00
15Reactions of Acids and Bases
- Acids and bases are involved in a variety of
chemical reactions (well study 3 types here) - Acids react with certain metals to produce metal
salts and H2 gas, for example - Mg(s) 2HCl(aq) ? MgCl2(aq) H2(g)
- Acids react with carbonates and bicarbonates to
produce salts, H2O and CO2 gas, for example - NaHCO3(aq) HCl(aq) ? NaCl(aq) H2O(l)
CO2(g) - Acids react with bases (neutralization reactions)
to form salts and H2O, for example - HBr(aq) LiOH(aq) ? LiBr (aq) H2O(l)
- Neutralization reactions are balanced with
respect to moles of H and moles of OH-, for
example - H2SO4 2NaOH ? Na2SO4 2H2O
16Acidity of Salt Solutions
- Salts dissolved in water can affect the pH
- When salts dissolve, they dissociate into their
ions - NaCl ? Na Cl-
- If one of those ions can donate a proton to H2O,
or accept one from H2O, the pH will change - Na2S ? 2Na S2-
- S2- H2O ? HS- OH-
- S2- is a weak base that can accept an H from
H2O - Since OH- is increased, the solution is basic
17Salts that form Neutral Solutions
- When a strong acid dissolves in water, a weak
conjugate base is formed that cant remove a
proton from water - When a strong base dissolves in water, the metal
that dissociates cant form H3O - So, salts containing ions that come from strong
acids and bases do not affect the pH of the
solution - Example
- KBr ? K Br- (KOH strong base, HBr strong
acid) - (KOH HBr ? KBr H2O)
- K has no proton to donate, so cant form H3O
- Br- is too weak of a base to pull a proton off
of H2O, so cant form OH- - So, the solution remains neutral
18Salts that form Basic Solutions
- When a weak acid dissolves in water, the
conjugate base formed is usually strong enough to
remove a proton from H2O to form OH- - So, salts that contain ions that come from a weak
acid and a strong base form basic solutions - Example
- NaCN ? Na CN- (HCN is a weak acid)
- CN- H2O ? HCN OH-
- (HCN NaOH ? NaCN H2O)
- (Na doesnt affect the pH, its from a strong
base)
19Salts that form Acidic Solutions
- When a weak base dissolves in water, the
conjugate acid formed is usually strong enough to
donate a proton to H2O to form H3O - So, salts that contain ions from a weak base and
a strong acid form acidic solutions - Example
- NH4Br ? NH4 Br- (from NH3 and HBr)
- (NH3 HBr ? NH4Br)
- NH4 H2O ? NH3 H3O
- (Br- doesnt affect the pH)
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21Buffer solutions
- A small amount of strong acid or base added to
pure water will cause a very large change in pH - A buffer is a solution that can resist changes in
pH upon addition of small amounts of strong acid
or base - Body fluids, such as blood, are buffered to
maintain a fairly constant pH - Buffers are made from conjugate acid/base pairs
(either a weak acid and a salt of its conjugate
base or a weak base and a salt of its conjugate
acid) - Thus, they contain an acid to neutralize any
added base, and a base to neutralize any added
acid - Buffers cant be made from strong acids or bases
and the salts of their conjugates since they
completely ionize in H2O
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23How to Make a Buffer Solution
- An acetate buffer is made from acetic acid and a
salt of its conjugate base - CH3CO2H and CH3CO2Na
- The salt is used to increase the concentration of
CH3CO2- in the buffer solution - Recall CH3CO2H H2O ? CH3CO2- H3O
- (the equilibrium favors reactants, so the
concentration of CH3CO2- is low) - But, CH3CO2Na ? CH3CO2- Na
- CH3CO2H CH3CO2Na H2O ? 2 CH3CO2- H3O
Na - If acid is added CH3CO2- H3O ? CH3CO2H H2O
- If base is added CH3CO2H OH- ? CH3CO2- H2O
- Buffer capacity how much acid or base can be
added and still maintain pH (depends on buffer
type and concentration)
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25Calculating pH of a Buffer
- The pH of a buffer solution can be calculated
from the acid dissociation constant (Ka) - Example (for acetate buffer)
- CH3CO2H H2O ? CH3CO2- H3O
- Ka H3OCH3CO2-/CH3CO2H 1.8 x 10-5
- H3O Ka x CH3CO2H/CH3CO2-
- What is the pH of an acetate buffer that is 1.0 M
CH3CO2H and 0.50 M CH3CO2Na? - H3O 1.8 x 10-5 x 1.0 M/0.50 M 3.6 x 10-5 M
- pH - logH3O - log(3.6 x 10-5) 4.44
26Dilutions
- Often solutions are obtained and stored as highly
concentrated stock solutions that are diluted for
use (i.e. cleaning products, frozen juices) - When a solution is diluted by adding solvent, the
volume increases, but amount of solute stays the
same, so the concentration decreases - Mol solute concentration (mol/L) x V (L)
constant - So, C1V1 C2V2
- For molarity, it becomes M1V1 M2V2
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28Dilution Calculations
- Example 1
- What volume (in mL) of 8.0 M HCl is needed to
prepare 1.0 L of 0.50 M HCl? - M1V1 M2V2 V1 M2V2/ M1
- V1 0.50 M x 1.0 L/ 8.0 M 0.0625 L 63 mL
- Example 2
- How many L of water do you need to add to dilute
0.50 L of a 10.0 M NaOH solution to 1.0 M ? - V2 M1V1/ M2
- V2 10.0 M x 0.50 L/ 1.0 M 5.0 L
- volume of water needed 5.0 L - 0.50 L 4.5 L
29Acid-Base Titration
- Molarity of an acid or base solution of unknown
concentration can be determined by titration - A measured volume of the unknown acid or base is
placed in a flask and a few drops of indicator
dye (such as phenolpthalein) are added - A buret is filled with a measured molarity of
known base or acid (the titrant) and small
amounts are added until the solution changes
color (neutralization endpoint) - At neutralization endpoint H3O OH-
- Molarity of unknown is calculated from moles of
titrant added (mole ratio comes from balanced
chemical equation)
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31Example Titration of H2SO4 with NaOH
- What is the molarity of a 10.0 mL sample of H2SO4
if the neutralization endpoint is reached after
adding 15.0 mL of 1.00 M NaOH? - Calculate moles NaOH added
- 15.0 mL x (1 L/ 1000 mL) x (1.00 mol/ 1 L)
0.0150 mol NaOH - Write the balanced chemical equation
- H2SO4 2NaOH ? Na2SO4 2H2O
- Calculate moles H2SO4 neutralized
- 0.0150 mol NaOH x 1 mol H2SO4/ 2 mol NaOH
0.00750 mol H2SO4 - Calculate molarity of H2SO4
- 0.00750 mol H2SO4/ 0.0100 L 0.750 M H2SO4