Topic 8: Acids and Bases Flashcards
What is the Bronsted-Lowry theory of Acids and Bases?
Acids are proton/H+ donors. Bases are proton/H+ acceptors.
What charges do the conjugate pairs gain?
The conjugate acid gains a positive charge.The conjugate base gains a negative charge.
What colour is Litmus in acids and bases?
Red in acids.Blue in bases.
What colour is Methyl orange in acids and bases?
Red in acids.Yellow in bases.
What colour is phenolphthalein in acids and bases?
Colourless in acids.Pink in bases.
Give the formula for an acid reacting with a base
Acid + base —> Salt + water
Give the formula for an acid reacting with a metal oxide
Acid + metal oxide —> Salt + water
Give the formula for an acid reacting with a metal
Acid + metal —> Salt + hydrogen
Give the formula for an acid reacting with a carbonate
Acid + carbonate —> Salt + water + carbon dioxide
What does a change of one pH unit represent?And if the pH increases how does this affect [H+]?
A ten-fold change in [H+]. Increase in pH = decrease in [H+]
Dilute acids vs concentrated acids (+ what ion does so)
Dilute acids demonstrate the typical properties of acids.i.e. they turn litmus redConcentrated acids do not demonstrate the typical properties of acids. *IT IS THE HYDRONIUM ION THAT GIVES ACIDS THEIR ACID PROPERTIES
Define strong acids
Strong acids ionize/dissociate almost completely in water. “—>”
Define weak acids
Weak acids will transfer a few protons to water. They mostly remain as molecules. “⇌”
Give three examples of strong acids and three examples of weak acids
Hydrochloric acid (HCl)Nitric acid (HNO₃)Sulfuric acid (H₂SO₄)——Phosphoric acid (H₃PO₄)Ethanoic acid (CH₃COOH)Carbonic acid (H₂CO₃)
Give four examples of strong bases and two examples of weak bases
Lithium hydroxide LiOHSodium hydroxide NaOHPotassium hydroxide KOHBarium hydroxide Ba(OH)₂——Ammonia NH₃Ethylamine CH₃CH₂NH₂
Electrical conductivity, rate of reaction and pH for strong and weak acids / bases
Strong acids and bases- Good electrical conductors as lots of ions (charged particles)- Fast rate of reaction- pHAcids: Low as many H+ ionsBases: High as many OH- ionsWeak acids and bases- Poor electrical conductors as few ions- Slow rate of reaction- pHAcids: Weakly acidic as less H+ ionsBases: Weakly basic as less OH- ions