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Reaction Predictions ! !

Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

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Page 1: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Reaction Predictions ! !

Page 2: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Types of Chemical Reactions

1) Single Displacement2) Double Displacement3) Decomposition4) Synthesis5) Combustion

Page 3: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Single Displacement

• A +BC AC + B• One element shoves the other element out!

Page 4: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 1:

• Ca + AlCl3 CaCl2 + Al

Page 5: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 2:

• AlCl3 + K

Page 6: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

What do metals have to do with reaction predictions?

• Metals vary in reactivity – Lose electrons in a reaction – AND give the electrons to someone else

• Metal’s ability to give electrons depends on how reactive the metal is– How easily/quickly the metal wants to give up its

electrons

Page 7: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Activity Series of Metals

• Metals listed and arranged according to reactivity. • Metals will displace other metal ions in a

solution from any metal BELOW it• Generally,

– Metals > H2 on activity series will produce hydrogen gas (H2) when combined with an acid

– Metals < H2 cannot produce hydrogen gas (H2) from an acid

Page 8: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Double Displacement

• AB + CD AC + BD

• Elements switch partners !

Page 9: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 1:

• Na3PO4 + BaCl2 Ba3(PO4)2 + NaCl

Page 10: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 2:

K3PO4 + MgSO4

Page 11: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Decomposition

• AB A + B

• Breaking chemical compound up, going from BIG to SMALL !

Page 12: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 1:

• Au2O3 Au + O2

Page 13: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 2:

• H2O

Page 14: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Synthesis

• A + B AB

• Joining! Making new chemical compound !

Page 15: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 1:

• Mg + N2 Mg3N2

Page 16: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 2:

• Be + Cl2

Page 17: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Combustion

• HYDROCARBON (compound made up of just Cs and Hs) + O2 CO2 + H2O

• Chemical reactions involve a compound burning.

Page 18: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 1:

• C2H6 + O2 CO2 + H2O

Page 19: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 2:

• Propane (C3H8) burns

Page 20: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Thermodynamics

Page 21: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Energy

• Ability to do work • Units– Joules (J), we will use “kJ”• Can be converted to different types

• Energy change results from forming and breaking chemical bonds in reactions

Page 22: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Heat (q)

• Energy transfer between a system and the surroundings

• Transfer is instant from high----low temperature until equilibrium

• Temperature—– Measure of heat, “hot/cold”– the average kinetic energy of molecules

Page 23: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Heat (q) continued

• Kinetic theory of heat – Heat increase resulting in temperature change

causes an increase in the average motion of particles within the system.

• Increase in heat results in– Energy transfer– Increase in both potential and kinetic energies

Page 24: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Thermodynamics 101

• First Law of Thermodynamics– Energy is conserved in a reaction (it cannot be created

or destroyed)---sound familiar???

– Math representation: ΔEtotal = ΔEsys + ΔEsurr = 0• Δ= “change in” • ΔΕ= positive (+), energy gained by system• ΔΕ= negative (-), energy lost by system • Total energy = sum of the energy of each part in a chemical

reaction

Page 25: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Calorimetry

How do we find the change in energy/heat transfer that occurs in chemical reactions???

Page 26: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Calorimetry

• Experimentally “measuring” heat transfer for a chemical reaction or chemical compound

• Calorimeter– Instrument used to determine the heat transfer of a chemical reaction– Determines how much energy is in food – Observing temperature change within water around a reaction

container

** assume a closed system, isolated container– No matter, no heat/energy lost – Constant volume

Page 27: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Specific Heat• Amount of heat required to increase the temperature of 1g of a

chemical substance by 1°C

• Units: cal/g-K or J/g-K

• 4.184 J = 1 cal, K = 273 + °C• Allows us to calculate how much heat is released or absorbed by a

substance ! ! !

• Unique to each chemical substance – Al(s) = 0.901J/g°K

– H2O(l) = 4.18 J/g°K

Page 28: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Specific Heat Equations

• q = smΔΤ– s/Cp = specific heat (values found in reference

table)– m = mass in grams– ΔΤ= change in temperature

Page 29: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 1: How much energy is required to warm 420 g of water in a water bottle from 25C to

37C ?

Q = ? m = 420 gC(H2O (l)) = 4.18 J/g• C

ΔT = 37-25 = 12 C

Q = mc ΔT

Q = (420 g)(4.18 J/g• C)(12 C)Q = 21067 J or 21 kJ

Page 30: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

“Coffee Cup” calorimeter

• Styrofoam cup with known water mass in calorimeter– Assume no heat loss on walls– Initial water temp and then chemical placed inside– Final temperature recorded

• Any temperature increase has to be from the heat lost by the substance SOOO– All the heat lost from the chemical reaction or

substance is transferred to H2O in calorimeter

Page 31: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

• The specific heat of gold is 0.128 J/g°C. How much heat would be needed to warm 250.0 g of gold from 25°C to 100°C?

Example 3:

Page 32: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Heat of Fusion (Hf)

• Fusion means melting/freezing• amount of energy needed to melt/freeze 1g of a

substance

• Different for every substance – look on reference tables

• Q = mHf

Page 33: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Heat of Vaporization(Hv)

• Vaporization means boiling/condensing• amount of energy needed to boil/condense

1g of a substance• Different for every substance – look on

reference tables• Q = mHv

Page 34: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Examples:

• Calculate the mass of water that can be frozen by releasing 49370 J.

• Calculate the heat required to boil 8.65 g of alcohol (Hv = 855 J/g).

• Calculate the heat needed to raise the temperature of 100. g of water from 25 C to 63 C .

Page 35: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Phase Change Diagram

• The flat points represent a phase change – temperature does not change while a phase change is occurring even though heat is being added.

• Diagonal points represent the 3 phases

Page 36: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Enthalpy

Thermodynamics

Page 37: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Enthalpy (ΔH)

• 2 types of chemical reactions:

1)Exothermic—heat released to the surroundings, getting rid of heat, -ΔΗ

2)Endothermic—heat absorbed from surroundings, bringing heat in, +ΔΗ

**Enthalpy of reaction— amount of heat from a chemical reaction which is given off or absorbed, units = kJ/mol

Page 38: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Enthalpy of Reaction

DH = Hfinal - Hinitial Hinitial = reactants

Hfinal = products

If Hfinal > Hinitial then DH is positive

and the process is ENDOTHERMIC

If Hfinal < Hinitial then DH is negative

and the process is EXOTHERMIC

Page 39: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Enthalpy of ReactionHfinal < Hinitial and DH is negative

Page 40: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Enthalpy of ReactionHfinal > Hinitial and DH is positive

Page 41: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

More Enthalpy

• The reverse of a chemical reaction will have an EQUAL but OPPOSITE enthalpy change

• HgO Hg + ½ O2 ΔH = + 90.83 kJ

• Hg + ½ O2 HgO ΔH = - 90.83 kJ

• SOOO-----total ΔH = 0

Page 42: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion
Page 43: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Methods for determining ΔH

1)Calorimetry

2)Application of Hess’ Law

3)Enthalpies of Formation

Page 44: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Guidelines for using Hess’ Law

– Use data and combine each step to give total reaction

– Chemical compounds not in the final reaction should cancel

– Reactions CAN be reversed but remember to reverse the SIGN on ΔH

Page 45: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Calculate DH for S(s) + 3/2O2(g) SO3(g)

knowing that

S(s) + O2(g) SO2(g) DH1 = -296.8 kJ

SO2(g) + 1/2O2(g) SO3(g) DH2 = -98.9 kJ

The two equations add up to give the desired equation, so

DHnet = DH1 + DH2 = -395.7 kJ

USING ENTHALPY

Page 46: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 4:

NO(g) + ½ O2 NO2 (g) ΔH° = ?

Based on the following: ½ N2(g) + ½ O2 NO (g) ΔH° = + 90.29 kJ

½ N2(g) + O2 NO2 (g) ΔH° = +33.2 kJ

Page 47: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Enthalpy of Formation (ΔHf°)

• Enthalpy for the reaction forming 1 mole of a chemical compound from its elements in a thermodynamically stable state.

– A chemical compound is formed from its basic elements present at a standard state (25°C, 1 atm)

– Enthalpy change for this reaction = ΔHf°

• ΔHf°= 0 for ALL elements in their standard/stable state.

Page 48: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Enthalpy of Formation cont.

• DHrxn = Hfinal – Hinitial Really,

– ΔHf (products) - ΔHf (reactants)

• Calculate ΔHrxn based on enthalpy of formation (ΔHf)– aA + bB cC + dD

ΔH° =[c (ΔHf°)C + d(ΔHf°)D] - [a (ΔHf°)A + b (ΔHf°)B ]

Page 49: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Entropy

Page 50: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Spontaneous vs. Nonspontaneous

1)Spontaneous Process – Occurs WITHOUT help outside of the system, natural– Many are exothermic—favors energy release to

create an energy reduction after a chemical reaction • Ex. Rusting iron with O2 and H2O, cold coffee in a mug

– Some are endothermic• Ex. Evaporation of water/boiling, NaCl dissolving in water

Page 51: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Spontaneous vs. Nonspontaneous

2) Nonspontaneous Process– REQUIRES help outside system to perform

chemical reaction, gets aid from environment

– Ex. Water cannot freeze at standard conditions (25°C, 1atm), cannot boil at 25°C

**Chemical processes that are spontaneous have a nonspontaneous process in reverse **

Page 52: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Entropy (S)

• Measure of a system’s disorder – The degree of randomness associated with particles (molecules, etc.)

• Disorder is more favorable than order • ΔS = S(products) - S(reactants)

– ΔS is (+) with increased disorder – ΔS is (-) with decreased disorder

• State function– Only dependent on initial and final states of a reaction

• Ex. Evaporation, dissolving, dirty house

Page 53: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

When does a system become MORE disordered from a chemical reaction?

(ΔS > 0)1)Melting 2)Vaporization 3)More particles present in the products than

the reactants– 4C3H5N3O9 (l) 6N2 (g) + 12CO2 (g) + 10H2O (g) + O2 (g)

4)Solution formation with liquids and solids 5)Addition of heat, increasing temperature

Page 54: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Thermodynamic Laws

1st Law of Thermodynamics – Energy cannot be created or destroyed

2nd Law of Thermodynamics – The entropy of the universe is always increasing. – Naturally favors a disordered state

Page 55: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Gibbs Free Energy

Page 56: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

DG is the change in Gibbs free energy.

DG can be calculated asDGo = DHo - TDSo

The term DH represents enthalpy or heat energy which is available to do work.

The term DS represents entropy or random motion which is not available to do work.

Gibbs Free EnergyGibbs Free Energy

Page 57: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Le’Chatlier’s Principle

Page 58: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Basic Concept

• Main concept in chemical equilibrium

• Change in a variable that alters the equilibrium of a system (chemical reaction) products a shift in the OPPOSITE direction– Reaction shifts to counteract the variable’s influence

• Reaction tries to get back to equilibrium state-----SO reaction shifts

Page 59: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Basic Concept (cont.)

• What happens to a chemical reaction when equilibrium shifts

• When one side of a chemical reaction is stressed, the reaction shifts to the side of LEAST stress !

Page 60: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example:

A + B AB

A) Heat AB) Cool BC) Add ABD) Take out B

Page 61: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Gas and Pressure

Page 62: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Kinetic Molecular Theory

1) Gases are made up of TONS of particles, constantly moving, and spread out.

2) Gas particles drive straight until they hit/collide with something (ex. Wall, particles).

3) Small particles, HUGE space for them to roam! Gas volume mainly empty space

Page 63: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Kinetic Molecular Theory (cont.)

4) No force of attraction! –gas particles randomly move around

5) When gas particles collide with each other or a container wall, no kinetic energy is lost when they collide.

6) Temperature determines average kinetic energy of gas particles.

-not all gas particles are moving at the same kinetic energy

Page 64: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Acids and Bases: an Introduction

Page 65: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

An acid H+ in waterAn acid H+ in water

ACIDS

HCl hydrochloricHBr hydrobromicHI hydroiodicHNO3 nitric

H2SO4 sulfuric

HNO3

The following are examples of strong acids.

Page 66: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Base OH- in water Base OH- in water

BASES

NaOH(aq) Na+(aq) + OH-(aq)

NaOH is a strong base

Strong bases are strong electrolytes and soluble in waterStrong bases are strong electrolytes and soluble in water

04m08an104m08an1

Page 67: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

• Based on the concentration of H+ or OH- ions in a solution.

• Strong Acids/Bases: completely dissociate into ions in a solution.

• Weak Acids/Bases: do NOT completely dissociate into ions in a solution.

Strength of Acids and Bases

Page 68: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Conjugate Acids/Bases

• Acids and bases are related to each other through the addition/loss of hydrogen ions – Conjugate acid-base pairs

• Acids produce conjugate bases• Bases produce conjugate acids

Page 69: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Conjugate Examples

• HA + H2O H3O+ + A-

• HNO3 + NH3 NH4+ + NO3

-

Page 70: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Strength of Acids and Bases

• Based on the concentration of H+ or OH- ions in a solution.

• Strong Acids/Bases: completely dissociate into ions in a solution.

• Weak Acids/Bases: do NOT completely dissociate into ions in a solution.

Page 71: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

“BIG 6”---Strong Acids(Know them!!)

• HClO4

• HI• HCl• HNO3

• HBr• H2SO4

Page 72: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Strong Bases (Know them!!)

• Group I metal hydroxides (NaOH, KOH, etc.)

• Soluble/Slightly soluble Group II metal hydroxides ( Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, Ba(OH)2 )

Page 73: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Conjugate Acid/Base Strength

• Stronger the acid, the weaker the conjugate base

• Stronger the base, the weaker the conjugate acid

• Weak acids/bases have strong conjugate bases/acids

Page 74: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

• Binary acids– containing only 2 elements (one is hydrogen)– 1) Prefix “hydro—” with binary acid– 2) root name for second element– 3) End the name with “IC acid”

• Oxyacids– acids containing hydrogen, oxygen, and a nonmetal– 1) use the given polyatomic ion name from anion– 2) add “IC acid”

Acid Nomenclature

Page 75: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

• Write name

Example 1: HBr

Page 76: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

• Write the name.

Example 3: H2SO4

Page 77: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Let’s take a look at water

• 2H2O H3O+ + OH-

• [H3O+][OH-]= 1x10-14M2

–[H3O+]= 1x10-7M–[OH-]= 1x10-7M–Kw= 1x10-14M2

Page 78: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Example 1

• An acid is added to water and gives a hydroxide ion concentration [OH-] of 1.0x10-12M. What is the hydrogen ion concentration [H+] ?

Page 79: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

What is pH?

• Pouvoir hydrogene: “hydrogen power” • pH = measure of [H3O+]------- Acidity

• [H3O+] expressed in powers of 10– Ex. 10-14 to 10-1

Page 80: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

pH Scale

• Range from 0-14.• NEUTRAL, pH=7. (pure water)• BASE, pH > 7. (ocean water, milk of magnesia, baking

soda)• ACID, pH < 7. (stomach acid/HCl, vinegar, soft drinks)

Page 81: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

pH Scale

Page 82: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Equations

• pH = -log[H+]

• pOH = -log[OH-]

• pH + pOH = 14

• [H+][OH-] = 1x10 -14 M2

Page 83: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

• Example 2: What is the pH of a solution with a hydrogen ion concentration of 1x10-4M ? Is this solution acidic or basic ?

Page 84: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

• Example 4: Calculate the [H+] and [OH-] of a vinegar solution with a pH of 2.5.

Page 85: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Net Ionic Equations

Page 86: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

1) Molecular– Form you are most familiar with– Reactants and products written as neutral

compounds

– Ex. KCl + NaF NaCl + KF

3 Forms of Chemical Equations

Page 87: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

2) Full Ionic– All chemical compounds are written as ions if they

can be (ex. Strong electrolytes, strong acids, strong bases, etc.)

– Soluble compounds—dissociate into ions– Insoluble compounds—solid precipitate– USE SOLUBILITY RULES!!!

– Ex. Ba+2 + 2Cl- + 2Na+ + SO4-2 BaSO4 (s) + 2Na+ +

2Cl-

Chemical Equations (cont. )

Page 88: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

• Insoluble compounds are written as SOLIDS

• Pure liquids and gases are written as is, not broken up into ions, electrically neutral.

• Which compounds are broken up into ions????– Soluble ionic compounds– Strong acids (HCl, HBr, HI, HNO3 , HClO4 , H2SO4)

– Strong Bases ( Group IA bases and Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2 , Ba(OH)2

How do we write a FULL IONIC equation?

Page 89: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

• Write the full ionic equation

Ex. 2: 2CH3CO2H + Sr(OH)2 Sr(CH3CO2)2 + 2H2O

Page 90: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

3) Net Ionic Equations– Next step after full ionic equation. – Elimination of Spectator Ions (ions found on

both sides of the equation, not changed with reaction)

– Includes chemical compounds and ions DIRECTLY involved in chemical reaction.

Forms of Chemical Equations (cont.)

Page 91: Reaction Predictions ! !. Types of Chemical Reactions 1)Single Displacement 2)Double Displacement 3)Decomposition 4)Synthesis 5)Combustion

Na2CO3 + Ca(NO3)2 2NaNO3 + CaCO3 (s)

Write net ionic equation

Example 3: