What do acids taste like?
sour
What do bases feel like?
slippery
1) predict the products
2) balance the equation
Na + H2SO4 --> ?
2Na + H2SO4 --> Na2SO4 + H2
Metal + Acid --> Salt + H2
Single replacement reaction
The pH of a solution changes from 8 to 9.
A. the concentration of OH- decreases by 1 mole/L
B. the concentration of OH- decreases by 10 mol/L
C. the concentration of OH- increases by 1 mole/L
C. the concentration of OH- increased by 10 mole/L
C
The pH of a solution changes from 8 to 9.
The pH scale is logarithmic. every increase is a 10x change in concentration
8 --> 9 is getting more basic. [OH-] INCREASED
What is both the Bronsted-Lowry Definition and Arrhnius definition of an acid?
Proton donor
or
Releases H+ ions into solution
What is the Bronsted Lowry definition of a base?
Can't remember which one is which? Say them both at least.
A: Releases OH- ions
BL: H+ acceptor; takes H+ out of solution
1) Predict the products
2) balance the equation
HCl + BaCO3 --> ?
2HCl + BaCO3 --> BaCl2 + H2O + CO2
Acid + carbonate --> salt + H2O + CO2
What is the concentration of H+ is in a solution that has a pH of 9.4?
UNITS ON YOUR ANSWER
3.98 x 10-10 M or mol H+/L
[H+] = 10-pH
Give a number range.
Less than 7.
0-7
What side of the pH scale is basic? Give a range.
More than 7.
7-14
1) Predict the Products
2) Balance the equation
H3PO4 + Ca(OH)2 --> ?
2 H3PO4 + 3 Ca(OH)2 --> Ca3(PO4)2 + 6 H2O
Acid + Base --> Salt + H2O
What is the concentration of H+ in a solution with a pOH of 3.2?
1.58 x 10-11
14 = pH + pOH
if pOH = 3.2, pH = 10.8
[H+] = 10-pH
Describe the bond holding hydrogen ion to the nitrate ion.
HNO3
In solution, all the H+ ions will fall off and NOT reattach
-->
When do you use normal arrows? -->
When do you use equilibrium or double-headed arrows? <-->
normal - when the A/B does not reattach (STRONG acids/bases)
double headed - when the H+ or OH- could reattach (WEAK acids/bases)
You have 50 mL of HCl at a pH of 5.
You dilute it with 100 mL of water.
What is the pH of your new diluted solution?
1) how much H+ did you start with?
[H+] = 10-5 = 1x10-5 mol H+/L
1x10-5 mol H+/L * 0.05 L = 5*10-7 mol H+
2) We diluted the solution with 100mL, so the new solution has a total volume of 150 mL, or 0.15L
3) find new [H+]. Take moles H+, divide by L solution [H+] = 5*10-7 / 0.15L = 3.33*10-6 M
4) Find pH pH = -log[H+] = -log[3.33*10-6 M]
pH = 5.48
Identify the acid/base/conjugate acid/conjugate base
HPO42- + H2O <--> H2PO4- + OH-
Acid: H2O Conjugate Base: OH-
Base: HPO42- Conjugate Acid: H2PO4-
List at least 3 strong bases and one weak base.
Strong: LiOH, NaOH, KOH, Ba(OH)2, RbOH, CsOH, Sr(OH)2
Weak: NH3, NH4OH, H2O (sometimes)
What is one way you can distinguish between strong and weak acids or bases?
reaction rate: strong = faster reaction
conductivity: strong = more conductive
pH: strong will be more acidic or more basic
What does the pH scale actually measure?
How much H+ is in a solution.
[H+]