Maps, Hash Tables and Dictionaries Chapter 10.1, 10.2, 10.3, 10.5.
1 10.1 Properties of Acids and Bases & 10.2 Theoretical Acid-Base Definitions.
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Transcript of 1 10.1 Properties of Acids and Bases & 10.2 Theoretical Acid-Base Definitions.
![Page 1: 1 10.1 Properties of Acids and Bases & 10.2 Theoretical Acid-Base Definitions.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062803/56649f035503460f94c1709b/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
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10.1 Properties of Acids and Bases & 10.2 Theoretical Acid-Base Definitions
![Page 2: 1 10.1 Properties of Acids and Bases & 10.2 Theoretical Acid-Base Definitions.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062803/56649f035503460f94c1709b/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
Recall: Properties of Acids and Bases
Acid Base
- pH < 7 - pH >7- tastes sour - tastes bitter- no special feel - feels slippery - neutralizes a base - neutralizes an acid - Ex. HCl - Ex. NaOH
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Reactions of Acids
1) With a metal:
Mg (s) + 2 HCl (aq) MgCl2 (aq) + H2 (g)
A metal and an acid will react to produce hydrogen gas.
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Reactions of Acids
2) With a carbonate compound:
CaCO3 (aq) + 2 HCl (aq) CaCl2 (aq) + CO2 (g) + H2O (l)
Carbonate compounds and an acid will react to produce carbon dioxide gas and water.
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Reactions of Bases
Bases react with carbon dioxide gas to produce carbonates:
Ex. Ca(OH)2 (aq) + CO2 (g) CaCO3 (s) + H2O (l)
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Naming Acids Without Oxygen
Without oxygen—start with prefix hydro- and end with –ic acid
Examples:
H2S (aq)=HI (aq) =
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Naming Acids With Oxygen
With oxygen—based on the name of the oxyanion (the anion with the oxygen attached):
Oxyanion name ending in –ate, the acid name ends in –ic acid
Examples: HClO3
-= HNO3=
Oxyanion name ending in –ite, acid name ends in –ous acid
Examples: HClO2 = HNO2 =
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Arrhenius Theory of Acids and Bases
ACIDS= molecular compounds that ionize in water and release H+ ions
Ex. HNO3 (aq) H+ (aq) + NO3- (aq)
BASES= ionic compounds that dissociate in water and release OH- ions
Ex. Ca(OH)2 (s) Ca2+ (aq) + 2 OH- (aq)
NEUTRALIZATION REACTIONS= can be represented by the following
H+ (aq) + OH- (aq) H2O (l)
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Strong and Weak Acids
Strong acid= will completely ionize in water (lower pH and react vigorously)
Ex. HCl (aq) H+ (aq) + Cl- (aq)
Weak acid= will partially ionize in water (higher pH and react less vigorously)
Ex. HC2H3O2 (aq) H+ (aq) + C2H3O2- (aq)
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In General…
The strength of an acid, HA (aq), depends on how much it ionizes in aqueous solution.
HA (aq) H+ (aq) + A- (aq)
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pH and Acidity
pH = 7, neutral pH > 7 = basic pH < 7= acidic
a pH change of 1 unit represents a 10-fold change in how basic or acidic a solution is
Ex. Lemon juice (pH = 2) is 10x more acidic than pop (pH = 3)
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pH Scale
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Homework
Read pp. 464 – 475Answer the following questions:
p. 469 # 1 – 9 p. 475 # 1, 3 - 12