ACID BASE EQUILIBRIA Chapter 7
ACID BASE EQUILIBRIA Chapter 7
ACID BASE EQUILIBRIA Chapter 7
Study/Review Guide
Arrhenius Acids and Bases
• Acids taste sour and cause certain dyes to change color.
• Bases taste bitter and feel soapy.
• Arrhenius concept of acids and bases:
• An acid is a substance that, when dissolved in water, increases the concentration of H+ ions.
• Example: HCl is an acid.
• An Arrhenius base is a substance that, when dissolved in water, increases the concentration of
OH– ions.
• Example: NaOH is a base.
• This definition is quite narrow in scope because it limits us to aqueous solutions.
1
• X– is called the conjugate base.
• After HX an (acid) loses its proton, it is converted into X– (a base).
• Therefore, HX and X– are a conjugate acid-base pair.
• After H2O (a base) gains a proton, it is converted into H3O+ (an acid).
• H3O+ is the conjugate acid.
• Therefore, H2O and H3O+ are a conjugate acid-base pair.
Relative Strengths of Acids and Bases
• The stronger an acid is, the weaker its conjugate base will be.
• We can categorize acids and bases according to their behavior in water.
• 1. Strong acids completely transfer their protons to water.
• No undissociated molecules remain in solution.
• Their conjugate bases have negligible tendencies to become protonated.
• An example is HCl.
• 2. Weak acids only partially dissociate in aqueous solution.
• They exist in solution as a mixture of molecules and component ions.
• Their conjugate bases show a slight tendency to abstract protons from water.
• These conjugate bases are weak bases.
• Example: Acetic acid is a weak acid; acetate ion (conjugate base) is a weak base.
• 3. Substances with negligible acidity do not transfer a proton to water.
• An example is CH4.
• The conjugate base of a substance with negligible acidity is a strong base.
• In every acid-base reaction, the position of the equilibrium favors the transfer of a proton from the
stronger acid to the stronger base.
• H+ is the strongest acid that can exist in equilibrium in aqueous solution.
• OH– is the strongest base that can exist in equilibrium in aqueous solution.
• Hydronium ions and hydroxide ions are the strongest possible acid and base, respectively, that
can exist in aqueous solution.
• Stronger acids react with water to produce hydronium ions, and stronger bases react with
water to form hydroxide ions.
• This effect is known as the leveling effect of water.
Weak Acids
• Weak acids are only partially ionized in aqueous solution.
• There is a mixture of ions and un-ionized acid in solution.
• Therefore, weak acids are in equilibrium:
HA(aq) + H2O(l) H3O+(aq) + A–(aq)
or
HA(aq) H+(aq) + A–(aq)
• We can write an equilibrium constant expression for this dissociation:
[H3O + ][A − ] [H + ][A − ]
Ka = or K a =
[HA] [HA]
• Ka is called the acid-dissociation constant.
• Note that the subscript “a” indicates that this is the equilibrium constant for the dissociation
(ionization) of an acid.
• Note that [H2O] is omitted from the Ka expression. (H2O is a pure liquid.)
• The larger Ka, the stronger the acid.
• Ka is larger since there are more ions present at equilibrium relative to un-ionized molecules.
• If Ka >> 1, then the acid is completely ionized and the acid is a strong acid.
Calculating Ka from pH
• In order to find the value of Ka, we need to know all of the equilibrium concentrations.
• The pH gives the equilibrium concentration of H +.
• Thus, to find Ka we use the pH to find the equilibrium concentration of H + and then use the
stoichiometric coefficients of the balanced equation to help us determine the equilibrium
concentration of the other species.
• We then substitute these equilibrium concentrations into the equilibrium constant
expression and solve for Ka.
Percent Ionization
• Another measure of acid strength is percent ionization.
• Consider the reaction
HA(aq) H+(aq) + A–(aq)
[A − ]equilibrium
% ionization = 100%
[HA]initial
• Percent ionization relates the equilibrium H+ concentration, [H+]equilibrium, to the initial HA
concentration, [HA]initial.
• The higher the percent ionization, the stronger the acid.
• However, we need to keep in mind that percent ionization of a weak acid decreases as the
molarity of the solution increases.
Using Ka to Calculate pH
• Using Ka, we can calculate the concentration of H+ (and hence the pH).
• Write the balanced chemical equation, clearly showing the equilibrium.
• Write the equilibrium expression. Look up the value for Ka (in a table).
• Write down the initial and equilibrium concentrations for everything except pure water.
• We usually assume that the equilibrium concentration of H + is x.
• Substitute into the equilibrium constant expression and solve.
• Remember to convert x to pH if necessary.
• What do we do if we are faced with having to solve a quadratic equation in order to determine x?
• Often this cannot be avoided.
• However, if the Ka value is quite small, we can make a simplifying assumption.
• Assume that x is negligible compared with the initial concentration of the acid.
• This will simplify the calculation.
• It is always necessary to check the validity of any assumption.
• Once we have the value of x, check to see how large it is compared with the initial
concentration.
• If x < 5% of the initial concentration, the assumption is probably a good one.
• As a general rule, if x > 5% of the initial concentration, then it may be best to solve the
quadratic equation or to use successive approximations.
• You should ALWAYS check the validity of any simplifying assumptions after you have
finished solving a problem!
• Weak acids are only partially ionized.
• Percent ionization is another method used to assess acid strength.
• The concentration of H+ will increase as the concentration of acid increases; however
these two concentrations are not directly proportional.
• Percent ionization decreases as the concentration of the acid increases
Polyprotic Acids
• Polyprotic acids have more than one ionizable proton.
• The protons are removed in successive steps.
• Consider the weak acid H2SO3 (sulfurous acid):
H2SO3(aq) H+(aq) + HSO3–(aq) Ka1 = 1.7 10–2
HSO3–(aq) H+(aq) + SO32–(aq) Ka2 = 6.4 10–8
where Ka1 is the dissociation constant for the first proton released, Ka2 for the second, etc.
• It is always easier to remove the first proton than the second proton in a polyprotic acid.
• Therefore, Ka1 > Ka2 > Ka3, etc.
• The majority of the H+(aq) at equilibrium usually comes from the first ionization (i.e., the Ka1
equilibrium).
• If the successive Ka values differ by a factor of less than or equal to103, we can usually get a good
approximation of the pH of a solution of a polyprotic acid by considering only the first ionization.
• H2SO4 is a special case.
• The first ionization step involves complete ionization.
• The second ionization is a weak ionization.
• HSO4- is a weak acid.
Weak Bases
• Weak bases remove protons from substances.
• There is an equilibrium between the base and the resulting ions:
weak base + H2O(l) conjugate acid + OH–(aq)
• Example:
NH3(aq) + H2O(l) NH4+(aq) + OH–(aq)
• The base-dissociation constant, Kb, is defined as
[NH +4 ][OH − ]
Kb =
[NH3 ]
• The larger Kb, the stronger the base.
Types of Weak Bases
• Weak bases generally fall into one of two categories.
• Neutral substances with a lone pair of electrons that can accept protons
• Most neutral weak bases contain nitrogen.
• Amines are related to ammonia and have one or more N–H bonds replaced with N–C bonds
(e.g., CH3NH2 is methylamine).
• Anions of weak acids
• Example: ClO– is the conjugate base of HClO (weak acid):
ClO–(aq) + H2O(l) HClO(aq) + OH–(aq) Kb = 3.33 10–7