Chapter 20: Acids, Bases, and pH (20.1-20.5) Flashcards
what is a bronsted-lowry acid?
a H+/proton donor
what is a bronsted-lowry base?
a H+/proton acceptor
the general equation for acid dissociation
HA < – > H+ + A-
A- is the conjugate base
Define a conjugate acid-base pair
a conjugate acid-base pair contains 2 species that can be interconverted by transfer of a proton
(eg HNO3 and NO3- can be interconverted by transfer of a proton/H+ ion)
define monobasic acid
has 1 proton (H+) that can be replaced in an acid-base reaction
define dibasic acid
has 2 protons (H+) that can be replaced in an acid-base reaction
define tribasic acid
has 3 protons (H+) that can be replaced in an acid-base reaction
hydronium ion
H3O+
what is a salt
a salt is the product of a neutralisation reaction with an acid and a base where the H+ ion has been replaced with either a metal or ammonium (NH4+)
a strong acid
releases all of its H+ ions in aqueous solution
HA –> H+ + A-
example: HCl, H2SO4
weak acid
does not release all of its H+ ions in aqueous solution
HA < – > H+ + A-
example: all organic acids eg CH3COOH
equation for pH
pH = -log[H+]
use base 10
acid dissociation constant or Ka
Ka = [H+][A-] / [HA] or = [H+]^2 / [HA]
HA < – > H+ + A- (Ka is only for weak acids)
pKa =
-log(Ka)
base 10
dilute acid + metal –>
redox
salt + H2
eg 2H+(aq) + Zn(s) –> Zn 2+(aq) + H2(g)