AICE Chemistry

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AICE Chemistry Acids and Bases

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AICE Chemistry. Acids and Bases. Acids. These are chemical compounds that can be identified because they start with the element Hydrogen. They have the generic formula “HX”. . The “X” part can be either a non-metal or a polyatomic. If the “X” is a non-metal, we have a binary acid. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of AICE Chemistry

Page 1: AICE Chemistry

AICE Chemistry

Acids and Bases

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Acids

• These are chemical compounds that can be identified because they start with the element Hydrogen.

• They have the generic formula “HX”.

• The “X” part can be either a non-metal or a polyatomic.

• If the “X” is a non-metal, we have a binary acid.

• If the “X” is a polyatomic, we have an oxy-acid.

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Examples

Binary Acids• HCl• HBr• H2S

Oxy-Acids• HNO3

• H2SO4

• HC2H3O2

• H3PO4

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Acid Names

• Binary acids are named according to the format “hydro _______ ic acid”

• The prefix “hydro” means binary acid.

• All that you need in the space is usually the root of the non-metal’s name.

• Oxy-acids are named according to the format “_________-ic acid.

• There is no “hydro” here – these are not binary acids.

• All that you need in the space is usually the root of the polyatomic’s name.

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Examples

Binary Acids• HCl = hydrochloric acid• HBr = hydrobromic acid• H2S = hydrosulfuric acid

(this one is a bit of an exception – we use the full name of sulfur because it sounds better than “hydrosulfic” acid)

Oxy-acids• HNO3 = nitric acid

• H2SO4 = sulfuric acid ( again, a bit of an exception for the same reason noted in the binary name example)

• HC2H3O2 = acetic acid

• H3PO4 = phosphoric acid (another exception)

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Some Related Vocabulary• We will eventually discuss

the chemical behavior associated with acids losing the hydrogen atoms attached to the “X” part.

• From the formulas, you can see that different acids have different numbers of H atoms attached to that “X”.

• Since an H atom is nothing more than a proton (and a bonding electron) , we have:– Monoprotic acids – that

have only 1 H atom attached to the “X”.

– Diprotic acids – that have 2 H atoms attached to the “X”.

– Triprotic acids – that have 3 atoms attached to the “X”.

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Examples and Practice

• H2CrO4

• HI• H2CO3

• HF• H3PO4

• H2Cr2O7

• H2SO4

• Describe each of the acids to the left in terms of the vocabulary already covered so far.

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Chemical Behaviors• Acids react with metal

carbonates to produce aqueous “salt”, gaseous carbon dioxide, and water.

• This is the pattern for both binary and oxy-acids.

• Note that a bicarbonate will yield the same results.

• Acids react with metals to produce hydrogen (diatomic) and an aqueous “salt”.

• Definition – a “salt” is simply an ionic compound produced during a reaction involving an acid. It contains the metal cation and the anion of the acid (the “X” part).

• Note – there are some very significant exceptions to this pattern.

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Write Equations for the Following:

• Aqueous hydrobromic acid reacts with solid potassium carbonate.

• Aqueous acetic acid reacts with solid sodium bicarbonate.

• Several pieces of zinc are added to a flask containing aqueous nitric acid.

• A piece of magnesium ribbon is added to a beaker of sulfuric acid.

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Ionization – Another Chemical Behavior

• Ionization is the term given to the reaction that occurs when an acid is dissolved in water.

• Unlike the dissolving of an ionic compound – a physical change – ionization is actually a chemical reaction between the acid and the water.

• In the reaction, the H atom proton leaves the “X” part and attaches itself to the two lone pairs of electrons on the water molecule.

• The product particle has the formula H3O+1 and is called the hydronium ion.

• The other product particle is an anion of the “X” part. It has a charge because it keeps the H atom’s electron when the H leaves.

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Look at the Equations

• Given: Hydrochloric acid is dissolved in water- Even though the given says “dissolved” in

water, since this is an acid we have to realize that this is actually a chemical reaction.

- So it is written as:

HCl + H2O H3O+ + Cl-

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Another Example:

• Nitric acid is dissolved in water:• The fact that this is an oxy-acid does not

change the format of the reaction and equation. The H atom is leaves the nitrate and attaches to the water forming hydronium. The nitrate ion is the other product.

HNO3 + H2O H3O+ + NO3-1

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What about Diprotic Acids?• These will be a bit more

complicated.• The key to these is to

remember that in an ionization, one H atom leaves the acid, bonds with the water to form hydronium, and the remaining particle is “one more negative” than it was before the ionization.

• What you will see is that a diprotic acid will undergo two separate ionizations.

• Likewise, a triprotic acid will undergo three separate ionizations.

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Consider Sulfuric Acid

• Sulfuric acid is H2SO4 and is obviously diprotic.• Its two separate ionizations are presented

below.1st Ionization:

H2SO4 + H2O H3O+ + HSO4-1

2nd Ionization

HSO4-1 + H2O H3O+ + SO4

-2

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A Quick Check:

• Write the set of ionizations that occur in phosphoric acid.

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Stoich VIII for Acids

• This is actually easier for acids than it was in the Equilibrium unit.

• Your typical focus is going to be on calculating the concentration of hydronium in the solution.

• What makes this relatively easy is that ionization is always a one-to-one ratio.

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An Example:

• Consider the ionization of HCl from an earlier slide:

HCl + H2O H3O+ + Cl- • As you can see, the ratio of HCl to H3O+ is

one-to-one. (coefficients)• Therefore, whatever the concentration of

the HCl solution is, the [H3O+] will be the same – all of the HCl actually becomes H3O+ .

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What That Means:

• If we are told that the [HCl] is 0.200-molar , then the [H3O+] is the same thing – 0.200 M.

• For the time being (it gets a bit more complicated when we learn about weak acid equilibrium) …

• Whatever the concentration of the acid solution is – we will simply state that the concentration of hydronium is simply the same thing.

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Why the Concern?

• We will need to be able to specify the concentration of H3O+ in order to calculate the pH of an acid (and eventually a base) solution.

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pH

• pH is a numerical scale that is used to describe the relative acidity of a given solution.

• Important to keep in mind that pH is calculated using the [H3O+] , but pH is NOT the actual concentration of anything.

• The pH scale was developed in order to facilitate greater understanding – the general public was essentially lost when a discussion included a concentration – measured in moles/liter

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Think about it…

• You are trying to communicate information about the relative acidity of a solution and you tell the listener that the system is 0.0010-molar.

• And they think that you are talking about teeth.

• But, if you tell the listener that the solution has a pH = 3 , they are far more comfortable – even though they probably do not have enough of a Math background to understand how pH is calculated.

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ComparingThe solution is 0.0010-molar The pH of the solution is 3

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The pH Equation

pH = - log [H3O+]Which is: the pH of solution is the opposite of the base10 log of the concentration of the hydronium in the solution.

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The pH Scale

• This is a numerical scale that presents the relative acidities and basicities of acid and base solutions.

• It commonly runs from 0 to 14 .• Next slide show the structure of the scale.

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Visual of the pH Scale