Acid Bases Salts and Reacting Quantities
Acid Bases Salts and Reacting Quantities
Acid Bases Salts and Reacting Quantities
Acids
An acid dissociates to release hydrogen ions, H+(aq), into aqueous solution, along with a
negative ion which depends on the acid. Acids are either strong acids, in which case
every acid molecule splits up (dissociates) to produce hydrogen ions, or weak acids, in
which case only some of the acid molecules split up to produce hydrogen ions they are
partially dissociated.
Name
Hydrochloric acid
Nitric acid
Sulphuric acid
Phosphoric acid
Ethanoic acid
Dissociation
HCl H+(aq) + Cl-(aq)
HNO3 H+(aq) + NO3-(aq)
H2SO4 2H+(aq) + SO42-(aq)
H3PO4 3H+(aq) + PO43-(aq)
CH3COOH CH3COO-(aq) + H+(aq)
Negative ion
Chloride, ClNitrate, NO3Sulphate, SO42Phosphate, PO43Ethanoate, CH3COO-
Notes
Strong acid, fully dissociated
Strong acid, fully dissociated
Strong acid, fully dissociated
Strong acid, fully dissociated
Weak acid, partially dissociated
The H+ ions are responsible for the characteristic reactions of acids in fact the negative
ions simply remain in solution before and after and play no part in the reactions we call
these spectator ions. Since an H+ ion is simply a proton, we call acids proton donors.
Bases
Bases accept the H+ ions from acids. We classify them as proton acceptors. Common
bases are metal oxides, metal carbonates, metal hydroxides and ammonia.
Bases which dissolve in water to release hydroxide ions, OH-, into solution are called
alkalis.
e.g. NaOH(s) + H2O(l) Na+(aq) + OH-(aq)
KOH(s) + H2O(l) K+(aq) + OH-(aq)
Ammonia solution is an alkali because the ammonia reacts with the water reversibly to
produce ammonium ions and hydroxide ions in solution:
NH3(g) + H2O(l) NH4+(aq) + OH-(aq)
It is the hydroxide ions in solution which give alkalis their characteristic alkaline behaviour.
Neutralisation
When any acid is neutralised by any alkali, the H+ ions in the acid react with the OH- ions in
the alkali to form water:
H+(aq) + OH-(aq) H2O(l)
Here the OH- ions are acting as bases, accepting the protons (H+ ions) to form water.
Proton acceptors and proton donors
Given the definitions of acids as proton donors and bases as proton acceptors it is possible
to see examples of acid/base reactions which are not in solution, e.g. the reaction between
hydrogen chloride and ammonia in the gaseous state:
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Salts are produced in the neutralisation reactions of acids with bases such as metal oxides,
metal carbonates, or alkalis:
i) neutralisation of acids by metal oxides
Metal oxides are typically insoluble. The observations expected would be:
The metal oxide dissolves/disappears
NO BUBBLING !
The reaction may be exothermic
General equation:
e.g.
+2 -2
+2 -1
-1
+1 -2
+1
Adding the oxidation numbers, we can show that these are NOT redox reactions, as shown
above.
Writing the ionic equation:
Remember that in solution ions are not joined to each other but free to move around. For
the substances in solution (i.e. with (aq) state symbol) we can write the ions separately in the
equation:
2H+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) + MgO(s) Mg2+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) + H2O(l)
The Cl- ions are spectator ions, there before and after the reaction having played no part.
We can therefore remove them from the equation to show just the species involved in the
reaction:
2H+(aq) + MgO(s) Mg2+(aq) + H2O(l)
This is the ionic equation, and has a subtly different meaning. The ionic equation shows
that ANY acid will react with magnesium oxide to produce magnesium ions in solution, and
water.
ii) neutralisation of acids by alkalis
Alkalis include metal hydroxides and ammonia solution (ammonium hydroxide, which we
can write as NH4OH(aq)).
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Observations:
Nothing visible, so an indicator/pH probe is used to when neutralization is complete
Reactions are exothermic
General equation:
e.g.
+1 -2 +1
+1 +5 -2
-2
-2
+1 -2
+1
Adding oxidation numbers shows that these are NOT redox reactions.
Writing the ionic equation:
As before we can write the ions separately for anything which is in aqueous solution:
H+(aq) + NO3-(aq) + Na+(aq) + OH-(aq) Na+(aq) + NO3-(aq) + H2O(l)
In this case both the sodium ions and the nitrate ions are spectators, so we can remove
them from the equation to show just the species involved in the reaction:
H+(aq) + OH-(aq) H2O(l)
The ionic equation we have put together in this case will be the same no matter which
acid or which alkali we use.
iii) neutralisation of acids by metal carbonates
General equation: acid + metal carbonate salt + water + carbon dioxide
Observations:
Effervescence
The solid metal carbonate dissolves/disappears
e.g.
+2 +4 -2
-2
-2
+2 -1
-1
+4 -2
-2
+1 -2
+1
These are NOT redox reactions, as adding the oxidation numbers to the equation shows.
Writing the ionic equation:
We write the ions separately for anything which is in aqueous solution. Most metal
carbonates are insoluble, but carbonates of Group 1 metals are soluble so can be
separated into ions too.
2H+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) + MgCO3(s) Mg2+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) + CO2(g) + H2O(l)
The chloride ions are spectators, so the ionic equation becomes:
2H+(aq) + MgCO3(s) Mg2+(aq) + CO2(g) + H2O(l)
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showing that any acid reacts with a metal carbonate to produce metal ions in solution, plus
carbon dioxide and water.
Check your understanding
1.
Write balanced symbol equations for the reactions of:
i) phosphoric acid solution with potassium hydroxide solution
ii) solid zinc oxide (ZnO) with dilute hydrochloric acid
iii) ammonia solution with nitric acid solution
iv) solid copper(II) carbonate (CuCO3) with dilute sulphuric acid
2.
3.
Write a balanced symbol equation for the reaction between sodium carbonate
solution and ethanoic acid solution, and hence show that the ionic equation is
2H+(aq) + CO32-(aq) CO2(g) + H2O(l)
+1 +6 (-2x4)
oxidation
+2 +6 (-2x4)
reduction
These ARE REDOX reactions. The metal is oxidised from 0 to a positive oxidation number
corresponding to the charge on the metal ion, while the hydrogen ions are reduced from +1
to 0.
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Quantitative Chemistry
Having explored the reactions of acids, we can use them as the basis for studying how to
calculate amounts of reactants used and products made, and the experimental procedures
required when measuring quantities accurately.
Solutions, and making standard solutions
We measure the concentration of a solution in moles per dm3 (mol dm-3). The old term
Molar is sometimes seen on solutions a 1 Molar solution (1M) contains 1 mole of solute
per dm3 of solvent.
We can write this as:
Conversely:
Application
How many moles of HCl in 100cm3 of 0.2 mol dm-3 HCl?
moles = 0.2 x (100/1000)
= 0.02 mol
What is the concentration of a solution containing 0.3 mol NaOH in 500cm3 of the solution?
Conc = moles / volume = 0.3 / 0.5
= 0.6 mol dm-3
What is the concentration of a solution containing 5.61g potassium hydroxide in 100cm 3 of
the solution?
First convert mass to moles of KOH
Mr = 56.1 Moles = 5.61/56.1 = 0.100
Conc = moles / vol = 0.100 / 0.100 = 1.00 mol dm-3
Calculate the mass of NaOH required to produce 250cm3 of 0.100M solution?
First work out moles in the solution
moles = conc x vol
= 0.100 x 0.250 = 0.0250 moles
Now work out mass of NaCl required
Mr NaOH = 40.1
mass = moles x Mr
= 0.0250 x 40.1 = 1.00g (to 3sf)
Check your understanding
4.
Calculate the number of moles of:
i)
Sodium hydroxide in 25 cm3 of 1.5 mol dm-3 sodium hydroxide solution
ii)
Nitric acid in 10 cm3 of 3.0 mol dm-3 nitric acid
Calculate the mass of:
iii)
Hydrogen chloride in 500 cm3 of 2 mol dm-3 hydrochloric acid
iv)
Ammonia in 20 cm3 of a solution of 8M ammonia
Calculate the concentration in mol dm-3 of:
v)
A solution made by dissolving 2.92g of KOH in 400cm3 of solution
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Amount of substance
When carrying out reactions, we do all our calculations in moles. Moles are used to
measure amount of substance, and we need to understand that the numbers in front of
formulae in balanced equations (the stoichiometry) are numbers of moles.
Using masses
Solids are measured out by mass. Sometimes masses of pure liquids may be measured
out. Masses of gases are occasionally used. In all cases we convert to/from moles using:
moles = mass / Mr
and
mass = moles x Mr
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At room temperature and pressure (denoted r.t.p.) the volume of one mole of any gas is
taken to be 24.0 dm3 (which is 24,000 cm3).
Under other conditions we need to make use of the ideal gas equation. This states that
pV = nRT
Application
i.
What mass of magnesium would be required for 0.200 moles?
ii.
What volume of 2.00 mol dm-3 hydrochloric acid would be required for 0.200 moles?
iii.
What volume of water with density 1.00 gcm-3 would be required for 0.200 moles?
iv.
What volume of hydrogen gas at r.t.p. would be required for 0.200 moles?
v.
What volume of hydrogen at -50.0C & 300kPa would be required for 0.200 moles?
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
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reactant which is not in excess and balanced equation to work out how much of the
reactants that are in excess actually reacted, and how much remains when the reaction is
complete.
Application
10.0g of iron is warmed gently with 150cm3 of 1.00 mol dm-3 sulphuric acid, reacting
according to the equation: Fe(s) + H2SO4(aq) FeSO4(aq) + H2(g)
i)
ii)
iii)
iv)
v)
Calculate the volume of H2 produced at r.t.p. [molar gas volume = 24.0 dm3 mol-1]
What would you observe during this reaction?
Calculate the concentration of the resulting iron(II) sulphate solution
Suggest how a sample of hydrated iron(II) sulphate crystals could be obtained
Calculate the maximum mass of iron(II) sulphate, FeSO4.7H2O that could be
obtained
i)
ii)
iii)
1:1 mol ratio, so 0.150 mol of FeSO4 will be made, and will be dissolved in the
150cm3 volume of the solution. Conc = 0.150/0.150 = 1.00 mol dm -3
iv)
v)
Mr of FeSO4.7H2O is 277.9
= 41.7g
6.54g of a metal M reacts fully with excess nitric acid producing 2.40 dm3 of
hydrogen at r.t.p. Calculate the Ar of the metal, and hence identify the metal. The
equation for the reaction is M(s) + 2HNO3(aq) M(NO3)2(aq) + H2(g)
7.
Magnesium oxide (MgO) was added to 10.0cm3 of 0.500 mol dm-3 sulphuric acid and
the solution warmed until no more magnesium oxide reacted. The remaining
unreacted magnesium oxide was filtered off, and the colourless solution obtained
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iv)
2.
i)
ii)
iii)
iv)
3.
1.
i)
ii)
iii)
i)
ii)
iii)
iv)
v)
= 0.0375 moles
= 0.03 moles
= 1 mole
= 36.5g
= 0.16 moles
= 2.72g
= 0.052 moles
= 0.13 mol dm-3
5.
6.
7.
8.
= 0.050 x 0.0250
= 0.00125
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