Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such...

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Acids and Bases

Transcript of Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such...

Page 1: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

Acids and Bases

Page 2: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen.

Examples: hydrochloric acid (HCl), sulfuric acid (H2SO4) and nitric acid (HNO3)• Bases are substances that turn red litmus blue, and neutralise

acids. Examples: sodium hydroxide (NaOH), sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) and ammonia (NH3)

Page 3: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• An alkali is a base that dissolves in water. Sodium hydroxide is an alkali and a solution of this is said to be alkaline.

• A monobasic acid has one hydrogen atom per molecule that is removable by reaction with a base, e.g HCl

• A dibasic acid has two hydrogen atoms per molecule that are removable by reaction with a base, e.g. H2SO4

Page 4: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• Household acids include vinegar, lemon juice and dilute sulphuric acid (found in car batteries)

• Household bases include ammonia, sodium hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide• When an acid reacts with a base a salt is formed. For example when hydrochloric acid reacts with sodium hydroxide, the salt sodium chloride is formed HCl + NaOH -> NaCl + H2O• When sulphuric acid reacts with ammonia, the salt ammonium sulphate is

formed:• H2SO4 + 2NH3 -> (NH4)2SO4

Page 5: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• Neutralisation of an acid by a base has many everyday applications.

• For example magnesium hydroxide and sodium hydrogencarbonate are bases used in stomach powders to treat acid indigestion. The excess hydrochloric acid is neutralised:

• 2HCl + Mg(OH)2 -> MgCl2 + 2H20

• HCl + NaHCO3 -> NaCl + H2O + CO2

Page 6: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

Arrhenius’ theory of acids and bases

• Arrhenius stated that:• An acid is a neutral molecule (HX), which dissociates in water

to form a hydrogen ion and an anion:• HX -> H+ + X-

• The acidic properties of the solution are due to the presence of H+ ions

Page 7: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• A base (MOH) dissociates in water to form a hydroxide ion and a cation:

• MOH -> OH- + M+

• The basic properties of the solution are due to the presence of OH- ions.

Page 8: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• In solution strong acids and bases are fully dissociated• In solution weak acids and bases are only slightly dissociated• An Arrhenius acid is a substance that dissociates in aqueous

solution, forming hydrogen ions.• An Arrhenius base is a substance that dissociates in aqueous

solution, forming hydroxide ions

Page 9: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• According to the Arrhenius theory, neutralisation of a solution of a strong acid such as HCl by a solution of a strong base such as NaOH, occurs as follows:

• In solution the strong acid HCl is fully dissociated into H+ and Cl- ions, while the strong base NaOH is fully dissociated into Na+ and OH- ions. When the two solutions are mixed, the H+ ions react with the OH- ions:

• H+ + OH- -> H2O

The other two ions present, Na+ and Cl-, do not react.

Page 10: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• The Arrhenius theory explains why strong acids only conduct electricity when dissolved in water, there are no ions present in a pure acid.

• A weak acid solution does not conduct electricity as well as a solution of a strong acid of a similar concentration as there are fewer ions in the weak acid solution. For similar reasons, a solution of a weak base does not conduct electricity as well as a solution of a strong base of a similar concentration.

• The Arrthenius theory was the first successful theory of acids and bases, but it has its limitations. In more recent times, more advanced theories of acids and bases have been developed.

Page 11: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

Bronsted-Lowry theory of acids and bases

• According to the Bronsted-Lowry theory:• An acid is proton donor• A base is a proton acceptor• An acid-base reaction involves transfer of a proton (H+) from the acid

to the base.• The stronger the acid, the more readily it transfers a proton• The stronger the base, the more readily it accepts a proton• The weaker the acid, the less readily it transfers a proton• The weaker the base, the less readily it accepts a proton

Page 12: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• When HCl is added to water, the acid, HCl, transfers a proton to water, which in this case, being a proton acceptor is a base:

• HCl(g) + H2O(l) ⇌ H3O+(aq) + Cl-

(aq)

Page 13: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• The Bronsted-Lowry theory of acids and bases has a number of advantages compared to the Arrhenius theory, it broadens the range of reactions that can be regarded as acid-base reactions. (Arrhenius only dealt with reactions in water.)

• For example: ammonia reacts with hydrogen chloride gas in the absence of water

• NH3(g) + HCl(g) ⇌ NH4+

(g) + Cl-(g) NH4Cl(s)

• Ammonia acts as a Bronsted-Lowry base, because it accepts a proton from the Bronsted-Lowry acid, hydrogen chloride.

Page 14: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• The Bronsted-Lowry theory also explains how substances can be amphoteric. For example when water reacts with ammonia it acts as an acid, donating a proton to ammonia.

• NH3(g) + H2O(l) ⇌ NH4+

(aq) + OH-(aq)

• When it reacts with nitric acid it acts as a base, accepting a proton from nitric acid

• HNO3(aq) + H2O(l) ⇌ H3O+(aq) + NO3

-(aq)

Page 15: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

Conjugate acid-base pairs

• In the reaction of ammonia with water• NH3 + H2O ⇌ NH4

+ + OH-

• Ammonia is a base and accepts a proton to form the ammonium ion, NH4+.

Water acts as an acid, donating a proton to ammonia, the hydroxide ion, OH-, is formed.

• This is a reversible reaction, so the ammonium ion, NH4+, is an acid, since it can donate a proton. The hydroxide ion, OH-, is a base, since it can accept a proton. The acids and the bases in the above reaction are related as follows:

• NH3 ⇌ NH4+

• H2O ⇌ OH-

Page 16: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• Species such as these that differ by the presence or absence of a proton are called conjugate acid-base pairs.

• H2O and OH- form one conjugate pair, while NH3 and NH4+ form another.

• NH4+ is called the conjugate acid of NH3, while OH- is called the

conjugate base of H2O• A conjugate acid is formed when a proton (H+) is added to the

Bronsted-Lowry base.• A conjugate base is formed when a proton (H+) is removed from a

Bronsted-Lowry acid.

Page 17: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• A conjugate acid-base pair is an acid and base that differ by the presence or absence of a proton

• In the reaction: • HNO3 + H2O ⇌ H3O+ + NO3

-

• The product H3O+ is acidic and the product NO3- is basic. An acid-base

reaction such as this tends to lead preferentially to the formation of the weaker acid and base.

• HNO3 is a stronger acid than H3O+, while H2O is a stronger base than NO3

-. As a result, the reaction goes mainly to the right.

Page 18: Acids and Bases. Acids are substances that turn blue litmus red, and usually react with metals such as zinc, releasing hydrogen. Examples: hydrochloric.

• In the reaction:• CH3COOH + H2O ⇌ CH3COO- + H3O+

• The reaction goes mainly to the left. This is because CH3COOH is a weaker acid than H3O+, and H2O is a weaker base than CH3COO-.

• In general, the stronger an acid, the weaker its conjugate base, and the stronger a base, the weaker its conjugate acid.