Acids
Bases
Acid Base Reactions
pH Scale
100

What do acids taste like?

sour

100

What do bases feel like?

slippery

100

1) predict the products 

2) balance the equation

Na + H2SO4 --> ?

2Na + H2SO4   -->  Na2SO4 + H2

Metal + Acid --> Salt + H2

Single replacement reaction

100

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

200

What is both the Bronsted-Lowry Definition and Arrhnius definition of an acid?

Proton donor

or

Releases H+ ions into solution

200
What is the Arrhenius definition of a base?

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

200

1) Predict the products

2) balance the equation

HCl + BaCO3 --> ?

2HCl + BaCO3 --> BaCl2 + H2O + CO2

Acid + carbonate --> salt + H2O + CO2

200

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

300
Which side of the pH scale is the acidic side? 

Give a number range.

Less than 7.

0-7

300

What side of the pH scale is basic? Give a range.

More than 7.

7-14

300

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

300

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

400

Describe the bond holding hydrogen ion to the nitrate ion.

HNO3

WEAK bond.


In solution, all the H+ ions will fall off and NOT reattach

-->

400

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)

400

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 

500

Identify the acid/base/conjugate acid/conjugate base

HPO42- + H2O <--> H2PO4- + OH-

Acid: H2O              Conjugate Base: OH-

Base:  HPO42-        Conjugate Acid: H2PO4-

500

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)

500

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

500

What does the pH scale actually measure?

How much H+ is in a solution.

[H+]