Topic 8: Acids and Bases

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Topic 8: Acids and Bases • Theories of acids and bases • Properties of acids and bases • Strong and weak acids and bases • The pH-scale

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Topic 8: Acids and Bases. Theories of acids and bases Properties of acids and bases Strong and weak acids and bases The pH-scale. 8.1 Brönsted -Lowry Acid - base Theory. The protolytic reaction : Reaction of an acid with water : HCl (g) + H 2 O ↔ H 3 O + + Cl - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Topic 8: Acids and Bases

Page 1: Topic  8: Acids  and Bases

Topic 8: Acids and Bases• Theories of acids and bases• Properties of acids and bases• Strong and weak acids and bases• The pH-scale

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8.1 Brönsted-Lowry Acid - base Theory

• The protolytic reaction:Reaction of an acid with water:HCl (g) + H2O ↔ H3O+ + Cl-

Reaction of a base with water:NH3 (g) + H2O ↔ OH- + NH4

+

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• Draw the reaction formulas when these substances react as acids:

HNO3

H2SO4

• Draw the reaction formulas when these substances react as bases:

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Brönsted-Lowry Acid - base Theory

• Acid: proton donor• Base: proton acceptor

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Conjugate acid-base pair

CH3COOH + H2O CH3COO- + H3O+

Acid1 Base2 Base1 Acid2

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State for each reaction which reactant is acid and which is base

a) HSO4- + H2O ↔ SO4

2- + H3O+

b) NH3 + H2O ↔ NH4+ + OH-

c) HCO3- + H2O ↔ CO3

2- + H3O+

d) HCO3- + H2O ↔ H2CO3 + OH-

e) H3O+ + OH- ↔ 2 H2O

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State for each reaction which reactant is acid and which is base

a) HSO4- + H2O ↔ SO4

2- + H3O+

acid baseb) NH3 + H2O ↔ NH4

+ + OH-

base acid c) HCO3

- + H2O ↔ CO32- + H3O+

acid based) HCO3

- + H2O ↔ H2CO3 + OH-

base acide) H3O+ + OH- ↔ 2 H2O base acid

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Which of these are conjugated acid/base-pairs?

a) HSO4-/SO4

2- b) H2SO4

-/SO42-

c) NH3 /NH4+

d) HCO3-/CO3

2- e) CO3

2-/H2CO3

f) H3O+/OH-

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Which of these are conjugated acid/base-pairs?

a) HSO4-/SO4

2- c) NH3 /NH4

+ d) HCO3

-/CO32-

What is the rule?

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The carboxyl group

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Amphiprotic• Water can act both as an acid and as a base;

H3O+ H2O OH-

• Such compounds are said to be amphiprotic (ampholytic).

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Monoprotic Polyprotic

• Monoprotic: CH3COOH CH3COO-

Acetic acid

• Diprotic: HOOC-COOH -OOC-COO-

Oxalic acid

• Triprotic: H3PO4 PO43-

Phosphoric acid

• Polyprotic

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Arrhenius Acid-Base Theory

• Acid: H+ Hydrogen ion / Proton– Acidic solutions contain H+ / H3O+

(oxonium, hydroxonium or hydronium ion)

• Base: OH- Hydroxide ion– Alkaline solutions contain OH-

Alkaline = Water soluble base

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Lewis Acid-Base Theory

• Lewis acid: electron pair acceptor, – e.g. H+, AlCl3, BF3

• Lewis base: electron pair donor, – e.g. OH-, NH3

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• A Lewis acid-base reaction involves the formation of a covalent bond. The Lewis base provides the electrons in that bond. This kind of covalent bond is called dative covalent bonds (see topic 13) or co-ordinate covalent bond.

• Its no difference between a normal covalent bond and a dative covalent bond except the origin of the electrons. Sometimes an arrow is used instead of a line to show that it's a dative bond e.g. H3NBF3.

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• The term Lewis acid is often just used for acids that aren’t Brönstedt acids

• The formation of complex ions, topic 13, is usually Lewis acid-base reactions

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8.2 Properties of acids in solution

• They have pH<7• They taste sour• They react with bases and metals• Where can you find:

Hydrochloric acidSulphuric acidAcetic acidCarbonic acid

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Properties of bases in solution

• They have pH>7• They feel ”slippery”• They react with acids• Where can you find:

AmmoniaSodium bicarbonateCalcium carbonate

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8.3 Strong acidsTotally dissociated

• Hydrochloric acid: HCl + H2O Cl- + H3O+

chloride

• Nitric acid: HNO3+ H2O NO3- + H3O+

nitrate

• Sulphuric acid: H2SO4 + H2O SO42- + H3O+

sulphate

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HCl + H2O H3O+ +Cl-

Start 100% 0% End 0% 100%

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Weak acidsPartially dissociated

• Ethanoic acid, (Acetic acid)CH3COOH + H2O CH3COO- + H3O+

ethanoate ion(acetate ion)

• Carbonic acid, H2CO3 H2O CO3

2- + H3O+

carbonate ion

(HCO3- hydrogencarbonate)

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CH3CH2COOH + H2O H3O+ + CH3CH2COO-

start 100% 0%end 99% 1%

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If the concentration is the same for the strong and the weak acid:

– The strong acid is more acidic than the weak acid– The strong acid has a higher concentration of

hydroxonium ions than the weak acid– The strong acid has higher conductivity

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Strong basesContaining the OH- ion

• All group I hydroxides: NaOH(s) + H2O Na+ + OH-

• Group II hydroxides Ba(OH)2 + H2O Ba2+ + 2 OH-

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Weak basesPartially dissociated

• Ammonia NH3 + H2O NH4

+ + OH-

• Ethylamine CH3CH2-NH2 + H2O CH3CH2-NH3

+ + OH-

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The anions from carbonic acid; CO3

2- and HCO3-

• Alkaline properties• Often water soluble salts

• H2CO3 + H2O HCO3- + H3O+

Conjugated acid and base pair

Acid Base Base Acid

• HCO3- + H2O CO3

2- + H3O+Conjugated acid and base pair

Acid Base Base Acid

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IndicatorsAcidic Neutral Basic

Litmus red blue

BTB (red) yellow green Blue

Phenolphthalein colourless colourless cerise

Universal paper (red) (green) (blue)

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Some typical reactions of acids- salt formations

• Neutralisation• Reactions with metals or metal oxides

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Neutralisation

Acid + base salt + waterHCl + NaOH NaCl + H2OH2SO4 + KOH HNO3 + Ba(OH)2

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Neutralisation

H2SO4 + 2 KOH K2SO4 + 2 H2O 2 HNO3 + Ba(OH)2 Ba(NO3)2 + 2 H2O

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With metals

Acid + metal salt + hydrogen gas

Mg + 2 HCl MgCl2 + H2

Al + H2SO4 ? ?

More noble metals (Cu, Ag, Au) doesn’t react with HCl or H2SO4 . They demand more oxidative acids (HNO3) and will then give other gases than H2 (N2O)

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With metal oxides

Acid + metal oxide salt + water

CuO + 2 HCl CuCl2 + H2O

To synthesise a salt from a noble metal you can’t start with metal + acid (Why?)

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Carbonates and hydrogen carbonates

Carbonates+ acids salt+ carbondioxide+ waterNa2CO3 + 2 HCl 2 NaCl + CO2 + H2O

CaCO3 + HCl KHCO3 + H2SO4

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Carbonates and hydrogen carbonates

CaCO3 + 2 HCl 2 CaCl2 + CO2 + H2O

2 KHCO3 + H2SO4 2 K2SO4 + 2 CO2 + 2 H2O

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8.4 The pH-scale

pH = -log[H+] [H+] = [H3O+]

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• pH = -log[H+] => change in one pH unit = 10 times difference in [H+]

• pH=5 pH= 3 => 100 times more acidic.• pH=8 pH= 11 => 1000 times more basic.

• pH-meter, pH-paper• [H+] = 10-pH

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