Acids and Bases
Buffers
Titrations
Equilibrium
Solubility
100

What is a weak acid?

An acid that does not dissociate completely.

100

Give an example of a weak base.

NH3 (Ammonia), H2O (water)

100

What is an acid-base indicator? What color does phenolphthalein turn in basic solution.

A special dye or pigment that changes color based on pH change. Example: phenolphthalein goes from colorless to pink.

100

What is the equilibrium expression (Keq)

Keq = (products)/(reactants)

100

What happens to solubility as the temperature increases?

It increases, generally.

200

Describe the Bronsted-Lowry definition of acids and bases.

Acid is a proton (H+) donor and base is a proton (H+) acceptor.

200

What is a buffer?

A combination of weak acid/conjugate base or weak base/conjugate acid.

200

What is the equivalence point in a titration?

The volume at which moles acid = moles base.

200

How do you calculate Kb from Ka (at 25C)?

Kw = 1.0*10^-14 at 25C. 

Kb=(1.0*10^-14)/Ka 

200

What is the molar solubility of CaCO₃ given Ksp = 4.0 × 10⁻⁹?

Ksp = x2

Square root (4.0*10^-9) = x

x = 6.32*10^-5

300

Name the strong acids

HCl, HBr, HI, HNO3, HClO4 , H2SO4

300

What is the Henderson-Hasselback Equation?

H-H equation: pH= pKa + log (A-)/(HA)

300

Describe the pH change during a strong acid-strong base titration. What is the expected equivalence point pH?

The expected EQ pH is pH= 7.00.

300

What is the expression for Ksp for general solid metal halide MX (s)?

Given MX (s), the Ksp expression is Ksp = (M+)(X-)

300

How does pH affect solubility

pH affects solubility because a lower pH increases the concentration of H⁺ ions, which can shift equilibrium to favor dissolution.

400

 Name the strong bases.

Group I and heavy II's (Ca, Sr, Ba, etc) and OH.

400

 How does a buffer maintain pH?

When you add H+, it reacts with the conjugate base and creates more weak acid keeping the pH stable. 

400

How do you determine the pH past the equivalence point?

You have excess OH-, so find OH- concentration, find pOH, and then find pH from pOH.
400

What is the common ion effect?

A given solution with a given concentration has an ion in common (usually the conjugate ion). You use this concentration in the ICE table instead of 0 for the initial.

400

What is the Ksp for Mg(OH)₂ if its molar solubility is 0.010 M?

If the molar solubility of Mg(OH)₂ is 0.010 M, then Ksp = [Mg²⁺][OH⁻]².
Ksp=(0.010)(2(0.010))2=4.0×10−11Ksp=(0.010)(2(0.010))2=4.0×10−11

500

What is the difference between a monoprotic and diprotic acid?

Mono-protic acids only have one ionizable hydrogen. Diprotic acids have two ionizable hydrogens.

500

What is the buffer region of a titration and how do you calculate the pH here?

This is the half-equivalence point, where pH = pKa.

500

Calculate the pH of a solution after adding 10 mL of strong base to 10 mL of 0.15 M strong acid. Use M1V1 = M2V2.

(0.15)(10)= M2(20) 

M2= 0.75 M 

500

What does it mean if Q > Ksp? 

The reaction shifts to the left. The product will precipitate.

500

How can you selectively pick a substance to precipitate based on Ksp?

Compare Ksp values for your solids to Q to determine the shift. If Q is greater than Ksp, it will precipitate.