Buffers Flashcards

1
Q

What are buffers?

A
  • buffers are solutions that can resist changes of pH when small amounts of acid or alkali added to them
  • pH still changes slightly but less
    • possible to saturate a buffer
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2
Q

How do buffers work?

A
  • keep conc of H+ and OH- unchanged
  • bases on an eqm reaction which will move in the direction to remove additional H+ and OH- if these are added
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3
Q

How do acidic buffers work?

A
  • made from weak aacids and soluble salt of that acid
    • maintains pH of below 7
  • dissociation of a weak acid is an equilibrium reaction
    *
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4
Q

What happens when an alkali is added to an acidic buffer?

A

if alkali is added, it will react with HA to produce water and A-

this removes OH- so pH remains the same

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5
Q

What happens when acid is added an acidic buffer?

A
  • eqm shifts to left, H+ ions cobining with A- ions to produce HA
  • since [A-] is small it will run out, so the soln is not a buffer
  • however more A- can be added by adding a soluble salt of HA which fully ionises, e.g. Na+A-
  • increases A- so more H+ can be used up
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6
Q

What is the function of the salt and the weak acid?

A
  • weak acid
    • act as a source of HA which can remove any added OH-
  • function of salt
    • acts as a source A- ions which can remove any added H+
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7
Q

Wat is another way of achieving a mixture of weak acid and tis salt?

A
  • neutralising some of the weak acid with an alkali such as sodiu hydroxide
  • if you neutralise half the acid, you end up with a buffer whose pH is equal to the pKa of the acid as it has an equal supply of HA and A-
  • at half-neutralisation : pH = pKa
  • useful buffer because it is equally efficient at resisting a change in pH whether acid or alkali is added
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8
Q

What is a basic buffer?

A
  • resist change but maintain a pH at above 7
  • made from a mxiture of a weak base and a salt of that base
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9
Q

Give an example of a basic buffer?

A
  • aqueous ammonia removes added H+ to form NH4+
  • ammonium ion removes added OH- to form ammonia and water
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10
Q

How does blood act as a buffer?

A
  • buffered to 7.4
    • 0.5 change can be fatal
  • H+ (aq) + HCO3- (aq) ⇌ CO2 (aq) + H2O (l)
  • addition of H+ moves eqm to right
  • addition oh OH- removes H+ to form water
    • eqm moves to left producing more H+
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11
Q

What happens if 0.1M of HCl added to buffer?

A
  • [HA] increases by 0.1M
  • [A-] decreases by 0.1M
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12
Q

What happens when 0.1M of OH- is added?

A
  • [HA] decrease by 0.1M
  • [A-] increase by 0,1M
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