Chemistry of Acids and Bases
Chemistry of Acids and Bases
Chemistry of Acids and Bases
and Bases
AP CHEMISTRY
Acid-Base Theories Left: Svante Arrhenius
Right: Gilbert Lewis
Anion as an acid
Bronsted-Lowry Acids and Bases
In all base examples, hydroxide ion forms by Neutral compound as a base
the transfer of a proton from water to the
base.
Anions as bases
Exercise 1
In the following reaction, identify the acid on the left and its CB on the right. Identify the base on
the left and its CA on the right.
Diprotic acids –
Polyprotic acids –
Polyprotic bases –
Amphiprotic or amphoteric –
Exercise 2
Write the simple dissociation reaction (omitting water) for each of the following acids:
Hydrochloric acid
Acetic acid
Ammonium ion
Anilinium ion (C6H5NH3+)
Hydrated aluminum ion [Al(H2O)6]3+
Hydrated iron(III) ion [Fe(H2O)6]3+
Relative Strengths of Acids and Bases
“Strength” is determined by the
position of the equilibrium.
Strong Acids/Strong Bases –
dissociate completely, have very
large dissociation constants
Weak Acids/Weak Bases –
dissociate only slightly, have
very small dissociation constants
Strong Acids vs. Weak Acids
The SIX Strong Acids (memorize!)
HCl
HBr
HI
HNO3
H2SO4
HClO4
Structure and
Acid Strength
Strong Bases
Hydroxides or oxides of group 1 and 2 metals (except Mg and Be, which have solubility issues)
The stronger the acid, the weaker its
conjugate base. (The converse is also true.)
Weak Acids and Bases
The vast majority of acids and bases are weak.
If it’s not on the short list of strong acids and
bases you memorized, it’s WEAK.
Equilibrium is established and it lies far to the
left – reactant favored.
The acid dissociation constant, Ka
NOTE: Water is a stronger base than the CB of a strong acid, but a weaker base than the CB of a
weak acid.
Water, The Hydronium Ion, Auto-
Ionization, and the pH Scale
Friedrich Kohlrausch, around 1900, found that no matter how pure water is, it still conducts a
minute amount of electric current, proving that water self-ionizes.
Water is amphoteric, and can act as either an acid or a base.
Allows us to calculate the hydroxide and hydronium ion concentrations for various situations.
[OH-] = [H+] solution is neutral, each of these values is 1 x 10-7 in pure water @25°C
[OH-] > [H+] solution is basic
[OH-] < [H+] solution is acidic
Exercise 5
At 60°C, the value of Kw is 1 x 10-13.
Using LeChatelier’s principle, predict whether the reaction is exothermic or endothermic.
pH = -log[H+]
pOH = -log[OH-]
pH + pOH = 14
NOTE: Sig Digs
Report as many decimal places on a pH as there are sig digs in the least accurate measurement
you are given.
10.0 M H+
Exercise 7
Calculate the pH and pOH for each of the following solutions at 25°C.
1.0 M H+
Exercise 8
The pH of a sample of human blood was measured to be 7.41 at 25°C. Calculate pOH, [H+], and
[OH-] for the sample.
Exercise 9
Calculate the pH of 0.10 M HNO3
Basic salts: when the anion is the conjugate base of a weak acid; ex. potassium acetate
Acidic salts: when the cation is the conjugate acid of a weak base; ex. ammonium chloride
If both the cation and the anion contribute to the pH situation, compare Ka and Kb.
If Kb > Ka, solution is basic.
If Ka > Kb, solution is acidic.
Exercise 21
Predict whether an aqueous solution of each of the following salts will be acidic, basic, or
neutral. Write appropriate equations.
NaC2H3O2
NH4NO3
Al2(SO4)3
Relationship between Ka and Kb
Exercise 22
Calculate the pH of a 0.30 M NaF solution. The Ka value for HF is 7.2 x 10-4.
Exercise 23
Calculate the pH of a 0.10 M NH4Cl solution. The Kb value for NH3 is 1.8 x 10-5.
Exercise 24
Calculate the pH of a 0.010 M AlCl3 solution. The Ka value for [Al(H2O)6]3+ is 1.4 x 10-5.
Lewis Acids and Bases
Acid – electron pair acceptor
Base – electron pair donor
Coordinate covalent bonds – covalent bonds in which both electrons come from the same atom
BF3 and NH3
Exercise 25
Determine whether each of the following is a Lewis acid or a Lewis base. Draw structures as
proof.
PH3
BCl3
H2S
SF4
Exercise 26
For each reaction, identify the Lewis acid and Lewis base.
Ni2+(aq) + 6NH3(aq) [Ni(NH3)6]2+