What is chemical equilibria?
A dynamic process that keeps the concentrations of products and reactants constant over time.
What are pH and pOH? How are they related
pH = -log[H+]
pOH = -log[OH-]
pH + pOH = 14
What is solubility? Molar solubility?
The amount of solute that dissolves (g/L).
The amount of solute that dissolves (mols/L).
What is the Ka expression when vinegar (CH3COOH) is dissolved in water?
Ka= [H+][CH3COO-]/[CH3COOH]
Give 2 examples of strong acids and their weak conjugate bases.
HCl -> Cl-
HBr -> Br-
H2SO4 -> HSO4-
HClO4 -> ClO4-
HNO3 -> NO3-
If Q<K, are the reactants or products favored?
Products are favored.
True or false: strong bases dissociate into strong conjugate acids.
False! the conjugate will have the opposite strength (weak -> strong; strong -> weak) of the initial acid/base.
What is Kw?
Kw is the water dissociation constant. 1x1014
I put iron (III) hydroxide into some water, dissociating into Fe3+ and 3OH-. What is the expression for Ksp in terms of ions and x?
Fe(OH)3 (s) <-> Fe3+ + 3OH-
Ksp=[Fe3+][OH-]3
Ksp=[x][3x]3
What phases of matter are excluded from Kc, Kp, Q, Ka, Kb, and Ksp calculations?
Solids and Liquids
What is the difference between Q and K?
K is the equilibrium constant. Q is the reaction quotient (not @ equilibrium).
What is a buffer?
A solution of weak acid or base that resists pH changes over a certain range.
What are two ways you can impact solubility?
Stirring
Temperature
Acidity/Alkalinity
Common Ions
As H2O (g) + CO (g) <-> H2 (g) + CO2 (g), if more H2O (g) is added, which way will the reaction shift?
It will shift towards the products.
Define Le Châtelier's principle.
A system at equilibrium will shift itself in order to maintain equilibrium when acted upon by external stress.
What does R.I.C.E. stand for?
Reaction
Initial
Change
Equilibrium
What do Ka and Kb mean?
Ka and Kb are the acid and base dissociation constants, respectively.
Do strong acids and bases have a high or low Ksp? Why?
Really High Ksp. Ksp=[products] and strong acids/bases dissociate completely aka lots of product.
What is the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation? Apply it to acetic acid (HCOOCH3 <-> H+ + COOCH3-; pKa=4.75)
pH = pKa + log([A-]/[HA])
pH = 4.75 + log([COOCH3-]/[HCOOCH3])
What are the two methods we learned for chemical kinetics and R.I.C.E. tables? Explain one of them.
Perfect Squares = if both the numerator and denominator of a K expression are perfect squares, take the square root and avoid the quadratic formula.
How can we relate Kp and Kc?
Kp = Kc(RT)Δn
R= 0.08206 (L*atm)/(mol*K)
Δn= moles of product - moles of reactant
Is water an acid or a base?
It's both!
Explain the common ion effect?
The common ion effect is the shift in equilibria due to the addition of a common ion.
Ex. H2CO3 <-> H+ + HCO3-
Adding NaHCO3 will shift the reaction left, as "product" concentration has increased.
Write the Kw expression for the dissociation of water.
2H2O (l) <-> H3O+ (aq) + OH- (aq)
Kw=[H3O+][OH-]
What are the different types of acids and bases? What do they mean?
Arrhenius acid/base - Makes H+/ OH-
Bronsted-Lowry acid/base -> proton donor/acceptor
Lewis acid/base -> Electron pair acceptor/donor