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  • Chemistry Unit 7

    Acids and Bases

  • Acids

    An acid is a substance that produces positive hydrogen ions when placed in water. (H+)The strength of an acid depends on how completely the substance ionizes. Strong acids completely ionize in water. Weak acids ionize only slightly.

  • Base

    A base is a substance that produces negative hydroxide ions when placed in water. (OH-)The strength of a base depends on how completely the substance dissociates into metal ions and hydroxide ions in water. Strong bases dissociate completely. Weak bases do not.

  • Basic Acidic Neutral

    H+

    H+

    H+OH-

    OH-

    OH-

    Solution Solution Solution

    Which solution is Acidic? Basic? Neutral???

  • Acids and Bases

    Produce H+ ions in waterHave a sour tasteBreak down metalsFormula starts with HPoisonous and corrosive to skinpH less than 7

    Produce OH- ions in waterHave a bitter taste and a slippery feelBreak down fats and oilsFormula ends with OHPoisonous and corrosive to skinpH greater than 7

  • Acids and Bases

    ACIDSExamples: vinegar,

    lemon juice, aspirin, stomach acid, battery acid, cola, milk

    BASESExamples: soap,

    shampoo, ammonia, drain cleaner, antacids

  • Neutral SubstancespH = 7Safe to ingest and leave on skinConcentrations of H+ ions and OH- ions are equal

    Examples: dH2O, salts, most cosmetics, lotions, eye drops, etc.

  • Naming Acids (This should be review!)

    Every acid formula starts with H, a cation. To name an acid, look at the anion the hydrogen is bonded to.H2S anion = chloride ion

    H2SO3 anion = sulfite ion

    H2SO4 anion = sulfate ion

  • Naming Acids1) If the name of the anion ends in ide,

    the acid name begins with the prefix hydro- The stem of the anion is given then the suffix -ic is added and is followed by the word acid.

    H2S (anion sulfur) hydro + stem + ic +

    acid Hydrosulfuric Acid

  • Naming Acids

    1) If the name of the anion ends in ite, the acid name is the stem of the anion with the suffix ous and is followed by the word acid.

    H2SO3

    (anion Sulfite) stem + ous + acid Sulfurous Acid

  • Naming Acids

    1) If the name of the anion ends in ate, the acid name is the stem of the anion with the suffix ic and is followed by the word acid.

    H2SO4 (anion Sulfate) stem + ic + acid)

    Sulfuric Acid

  • Does the formula contain Oxygen?

    Hydro stemic acid Anion end in __ ?

    No Yes

    stemous acidstemic acid

    ate ite

    Naming Acids

  • Writing Formulas for Acids

    If the name starts with hydroHydrosulfuric Acid

    Write the hydrogen ion with charge.H+1

    Write the anion with the proper charge.S-2

    Balance the charges using subscripts. H2S

  • Writing Formulas for AcidsIf the name contains the suffix ous

    Sulfurous AcidWrite the hydrogen ion with charge.

    H+1

    Look up the polyatomic ion (sulfite) and write it with the correct charge.

    SO3-2

    Balance the charges using subscripts. H2SO3

  • Writing Formulas for AcidsIf the name contains the suffix ic without the prefix hydro

    Sulfuric AcidWrite the hydrogen ion with charge.

    H+1

    Look up the polyatomic ion (sulfate) and write it with the correct charge.

    SO4-2

    Balance the charges using subscripts.H2SO4

  • Writing Formulas/Naming Acids

    Remember the following statements

    I ate it and it was icky. -ate becomes -ic

    Rite ous -ite becomes -ous (Righteous)

  • Naming Bases

    Bases are named using the traditional ionic naming system. Metal name + polyatomic ion name

    Examples:Ca(OH)2 = calcium hydroxideNaOH = sodium hydroxideAl(OH)3 = aluminum hydroxide

  • Writing Base FormulasBase formulas are written using the traditional ionic system.Look up the metal ion. Write the symbol with the proper charge. Ca+2

    Look up the polyatomic ion. With bases, this will always be hydroxide, OH-1.Balance the charges using subscripts.

    Ca(OH)2

  • Neutralization Reactions

    When an acid is added to a base, the end products are always salt and water. (neutral)A salt is defined as the neutral end product of an acid/base reaction.

    ACID + BASE SALT + WATER H2S + Ca(OH)2 CaS + H2O

    What is wrong with this equation???

  • Balance the final equation!

    H2S + Ca(OH)2 CaS + H2O

    1 Ca 11 S 14 H 22 O 1

    H2S + Ca(OH)2 CaS + 2 H2O

  • Neutralization ReactionsTry another example:Acid + Base Salt + Water

    H2SO4 + NaOH Na2SO4 + H2O

    1 Na 21 SO4 1

    3 H 21 O 1

    H2SO4 + 2 NaOH Na2SO4 + 2 H2O

  • Take it one step furtherSulfurous acid and sodium hydroxide yields

    sodium sulfite and water.

    H2SO3 + NaOH Na2SO3 + H2O

    1 Na 21 SO3 1

    3 H 21 O 1

    H2SO3 + 2NaOH Na2SO3 + 2H2O

  • One Last StepHydrosulfuric acid and calcium hydroxide

    yields what??? H2S + Ca(OH)2

    1) One product will always be water. H2S + Ca(OH)2 H2O + 1) The other product will be the + ion of

    the base bonded with the ion of the acid.

    H2S + Ca(OH)2 2H2O + CaS

  • pH Scale

    pH a number used to denote the hydrogen ion concentration, or acididty, of a solution

    pH Scale Typically runs from 0 14 0 7 14

    Acidic BasicNeutral

  • pH IndicatorsA chemical substance that changes color in the presence of an acid and/or a base.

    1) pH paper Dip the paper, match color to scale on vial to determine numeric pH.pH7 = base, pH = 7 neutral

    2) Litmus Dip one red and one blue paper.Red stays red, blue turns red AcidBlue stays blue, red turns blue BaseRed stays red, blue stays blue Neutral

  • pH Indicators1) Bromthymol Blue Add a few drops of

    bromthymol blue to the substance. If the blue color turns to yellow AcidIf the blue color stays blue Base1) Phenolphthalein Add a few drops of

    phenolphthalein to the substance.If the clear liquid turns to pink BaseIf the clear liquid remains clear Acid

  • Concentration Strength of an acid or base is determined by the amount of ionization. Concentration is determined by the amount of water added to the substance.

    Molarity (M)

    The number of moles of solute dissolved in each liter of solution.

    Molarity = moles of solute

    liters of solution

  • Example Problem #1

    If 1.00 liter of sugar water contains exactly 1.00 mole of sugar, what is its molarity?Molarity = 1.00 mol

    1.00 LMolarity = 1.00 M

  • Example Problem #2If 1.00 liter of sugar water contains exactly 2.00 mole of sugar, what is its molarity?Molarity = 2.00 mol

    1.00 LMolarity = 2.00 M or 2.00 mol/L

    (Twice as concentrated)

  • Example Problem #3What is the molarity when 0.75 mol is dissolved in 2.50 L of solution?

    Molarity = 0.75 mol = 0.30 mol/L or 0.30M 2.50 L

  • In Lab, grams are typically used in place of moles.If you wanted to make 2.00L of a 6M HCl solution, how much HCl would you need? First, calculate the molar mass of the acid.H 1 x 1.00795 = 1.00795Cl 1 x 35.453 = 35.453

    36.46095 = 36.461

  • If you wanted to make 2.00L of a 6M HCl solution, how much HCl would you need?

    First, calculate the molar mass of the acid.

    HCl contains 36.461 g/mol

    It would take 36.461 g of HCl to make 1 liter of a 1M HCl solution. How many grams would it take to make 2L of a 1M solution?

    2 x 36.461g = 72.922g

  • If you wanted to make 2.00L of a 6M HCl solution, how much HCl would you need? It takes 72.922g of HCl to make 2 liters of a 1M solution. How much would it take to make 2 liters of a 6M solution?

    6 x 72.922g = 437.532 g

  • Try One MoreSuppose you wanted to make 2 liters of a 0.5 M solution of HCl. How much HCl would you need?Each mole of HCl is equal to 36.461gFor a 0.5 M solution, you would need half that much. 36.461 x 0.5 = 18.2305g.However, you want to make 2 liters, so double that amount. 18.2305 x 2 = 36.461g.

    Chemistry Unit 7AcidsBasePowerPoint PresentationAcids and BasesSlide 6Neutral SubstancesNaming Acids (This should be review!)Naming AcidsSlide 10Slide 11 Writing Formulas for AcidsSlide 14Slide 15Writing Formulas/Naming AcidsNaming BasesWriting Base FormulasNeutralization ReactionsBalance the final equation!Slide 21Take it one step furtherOne Last SteppH ScalepH IndicatorsSlide 26Concentration Slide 28Slide 29Slide 30Slide 31If you wanted to make 2.00L of a 6M HCl solution, how much HCl would you need? Slide 33Try One More