Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria. The H + ion is a proton with no electrons. In water, the H + (aq) binds to water to form the H 3 O + (aq) ion, the hydronium.
Prentice Hall © 2003Chapter 16 Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria CHEMISTRY The Central Science 9th Edition David P. White.
Chapter 4: Chemical Reactions & Solution Stoichiometry OWL Due Date: 9/28/11 (11:59 PM)-Before Break! Exam #2 on 14-October w/Ms. Barsukoff. Early Exam.
Chapter 8 Acids and Bases and Oxidation- Reduction Denniston Topping Caret 6 th Edition Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required.
Warm Up #3
Acid -Base Theories
Chapter 16 Acid–Base Equilibria Lecture Presentation James F. Kirby Quinnipiac University Hamden, CT © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc.
Copyright 1999, PRENTICE HALLChapter 161 Acid-Base Equilibria Chapter 16 David P. White University of North Carolina, Wilmington.
Chapter 8 Acids and Bases and Oxidation-Reduction Denniston Topping Caret 5 th Edition Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required.
Acids and Bases. Properties of Acids An acid is any substance that releases hydrogen ions, H +, into water. Blue litmus paper turns red in the presence.
Chapter 15. Bronsted Lowry Acids and Bases An acid is a proton donor and a base is a proton acceptor. The loss of a proton is called as deprotonation: