topic 12 Flashcards
what strength are organic acids
organic acids- weak
what is a bronsted-lowry acid
proton donor
acid donates protons to bases
what is a bronsted-lowry base
Bronsted- Lowry base- proton acceptor
bases accept protons from acid
what does acid base equilibria involve
involves transfer of protons between substances
what is the equation for acid-base equilibria
what is a conjugate acid
used to be a base but accepted protons to become an acid
what is a conjugate base
used to be an acid but donated protons to become a base
what is a strong acid
completely dissociates in aqueous solutions
what is the equation for the disocciation of an acid
HA ⇌ H+ + A-
what is a weak acid
partially dissociates in aqueous solutions
what is pH
potential hydrogen, measures concentration of H+ ions
how do you work out pH when given the conc. of H+ ions
pH= -log[H+]
how do you work out the conc. of H+ ions when given pH
what is the Ka expression
how do you calculate the Ka of a weak acid given the pH and molarity of the solution
1) write the ionic equation for the dissociation of the acid
2) write the equilibrium expression
3) determine the conc. of H+, HA, A-
4) calculate Ka by putting the numbers into the equilibrium expression
what does it mean when the Ka value is smaller
weaker acid
what does it mean if the KA value is larger
stronger acid as the conc. of H+ ions is larger
how to calculate molarity (HA) when given Ka and pH of a solution
HA= [H+] squared/ Ka
how do you calculate the pH of a weak acid given the molarity and Ka solution
[H+] = square root Ka x molarity
then do -log[H+] to find pH
how to calculate Ka from mass and pH
1) find moles of acid using mass and mr
2) find conc of acid using moles and vol
3) 10 to the power of -pH to find [H+]
4) plug values into Ka expression
what is pKa
pKa is the negative base 10 logarithm of the acid dissociation constant (Ka)
how do you find pKa when given Ka
-log(Ka)
how to find Ka when given pKa
10 to the power of -pKa
how to calculate pH when given the molarity and pKa of the solution
1) find Ka by doing 10 to the power of -pKa
2) then do square root of Ka x molarity to find conc. of H+ ions
3) then do -log[H+]
how to calculate molarity when given the pH and pKa of the solution
find Ka using pKa
find conc of H+ using pH
HA= [H+]2/Ka
what is the expression for Kw
[H+][OH-]/ [H2O]=1
therefore
Kw= [H+][OH-]
whats the units for Kw
mol2 dm-6
what is Kw constant dependent on
- Kw constant is dependent on a constant temp
- as temp increases, Kw increases
- this is because there is more energy to split the molecule apart into H+ and OH- ions
how do you find H+ from Kw
[H+]= Kw/ [OH-]
why is the pH of pure water 7
how do you find pH from Kw
[H+]= square root Kw
then do -log[H+] to find pH
why is the pH of water not acidic
neither H+ not OH- ions are in excess
what does the conc. of a strong base equal
conc. of a strong base= conc. of OH- ions
what happens when you dilute acids
reduce conc of H+ ions, increasing pH
what does the conc of H+ ions equal to
conc of H+= conc of acid
how can you compare solutions through pH measurements
use acids with the same number of moles and compare their pHs to determine the strength of the acid compared to to other acids
same can be done to determine relative strength of bases
what happens when pH increases by 1 for a strong acid
the concentration decreases by a factor of 10
what happens for every 10 fold decrease in concentration
with a weak acid the pH value increases by a factor of 0.5 for every 10 fold decrease in concentration
how to determine the Ka of an acid experimentally
- accurately weigh the acid and dissolve it in a small volume of deionised water in a beaker
- transfer the solution to a 250cm3 volumetric flask. wash the beaker several times and pour the washings into the flask. make up to the mark with deionised water
- invert the flask several times
- take a sample from the solution and place it in a small beaker
- measure the pH of the solution using a calibrated pH metre
what are the errors with the experimental procedure to determine Ka
- assumed that the equilibrium of the acid is identical to the original concentration of the acid
- incorrect measurement of pH value
- transfer errors when weighing out small amounts
what can titrations be used for
- titrations can be used to find conc. of acid or base
- in burette- acid or base has known conc.
- conical flask contains acid/base with an unknown conc. but known vol.
what could be an error for titrations
adding too much past the end point
what does it mean when the indicator changes colour
- acid and base are mixed in the right proportions
- when indicator changes colour- end point