CHEMISTRY A+
AGATHUM, U CAN
                              DO IT!!!!
CHAPTER 7: ACID AND BASES
       3rd FEBRUARY 2021                1
WHAT ARE WE GOING TO REVISE
TODAY?
 Meaning of acid and the example of strong acid and
  weak acid
 Meaning of alkali and the example of strong alkali and
  weak alkali
 The strength of acids and alkalis
 Chemical properties of acid and alkali
 Numerical problems involving neutralisation
What is an acid ?
               an acid is a chemical substance
              which ionises in water to produce
                      hydrogen ions, h+
  Arrhenius
                                                  3
Acids in daily life
        STRONG ACID
                                     Nitric acid, HNO3
 Hydrochloric acid, HCl
                                       Sulphuric acid, H2SO4
           Can you give example of                         4
                 weak acid?
Monoprotic Acid
 Examples : HCl , HNO3
    * Monoprotic acid produces one mole of hydrogen
    ion when it ionises in water.
Diprotic Acid
Examples : H2SO4
  * Diprotic acid produces two moles of hydrogen ions
  when it ionises in water.
   Acid        Ethanoic       Hydrochloric         Sulphuric acid
                 acid            acid
 pH value         3                2                        1
  Type of     Organic acid                   Mineral Acid
    acid
Strength of   Weak acid        Strong acid           Strong acid
    acid
 Degree of    Ionise               Ionise completely in water
ionisation    partially
  Basicity    Monoprotic       Monoprotic              Diprotic
Concentrat    Low                High           Higher or double than
   ion of                                             HCl acid
 hydrogen
     ion
 Thermo-      Heat of          -57 kJmol-1           -114/higher
chemistry     neutralizatio
              n lower                                                   6
  Rate of     Low                 High            Higher than HCI
 Reaction
A chemical substance which ionises    Bases
in water to produce hydroxide ions,
OH-
Examples of bases:
Metal oxide, eg; ZnO, CuO, CaO          ALKALI
Metal hydroxide, eg; zinc
hydroxide, ZnOH
                                       A base that is
 Most bases are not soluble in          soluble in
 water                                    water
Bases which dissolve in water is called alkalis
                                  WEAK ALKALI
strong alkalis
Sodium hydroxide pellets               Ammonia
     H2O                       NH3 + H2O → NH4+ + OH-
NaOH → Na+ + OH-                                        8
   Alkali       Ammonia           Sodium                Inference
                solution         hydroxide
                                 solution
  pH value          10               14             A strong alkali is a
                                                 solution that has higher
                                                  pH value and a weak
                                                  alkali is a solution that
                                                     has a lower pH
Strength of   Weak alkali       Strong alkali     Ammonia solution is a
   alkali                                          weak alkali, sodium
                                                   hydroxide solution is
                                                       strong alkali
 Degree of   Ionise partially Ionise completely Sodium hydroxide
 ionisation                                     solution ionizes
                                                completely and produce
Concentratio Low                     High       higher concentration of
    n of                                        OH- ions compared to
 hydroxide                                      ammonia solution .
  ion (OH-)
                                                                              9
   Rate of   Low                     High
 Reaction
     QUIZ
Define strong acid.
      QUIZ
Define strong alkali.
     QUIZ
Define weak alkali.
    QUIZ
Define weak acid.
                           ACIDS & BASES
         More acidic                                  More alkaline
Strong Acid         Weak Acid                 Weak Alkali         Strong
(Low pH)            (High pH)                 (Low pH)            Alkali(High pH)
 Ionises
 completely in      Ionises partially in
                                           Ionises partially in   Ionises completely
 water - high       water - low
                                           water - low            in water - high
 concentration of   concentration of
                                           concentration of       concentration of
 hydrogen ions.     hydrogen ions.
                                           hydroxide ions         hydroxide ions.
 Eg: HCl, HNO3 ,    Eg: Ethanoic acid,
                                           Eg: ammonia, NH3       Eg: NaOH, KOH
                    CH3COOH
 H2SO4
            Examples of acidic, alkaline and neutral materials in aqueous solution
 STRONG ACID          WEAK ACID pH                       WEAK ALKALI pH STRONG ALKALI
                                        NEUTRAL pH 7
    pH <2                 2-6                                   8-12            pH >12
                                                         NaHCO3 sodium
 H2SO4 sulphuric                                              hydrogen       NaOH sodium
                         vitamin C
acid (battery acid)                      H2O water            carbonate     hydroxide pH 13-
                      (ascorbic acid)
       pH 1                                               ('bicarb', baking        14
                                                             soda) pH 8
HCl hydrochloric
                        CH3COOH         NaCl sodium                      KOH potassium
acid (in the lab is                                      NH3 ammonia pH
                      acetic/ethanoic   chloride (salt                  hydroxide pH 13-
  same as your                                           11
                       acid (vinegar)   water) pH 7                            14
 stomach!) pH 1
                     fruit juices eg        MgSO4        Na2CO3 sodium         oven cleaner
 HNO3 nitric acid     oranges and        magnesium           carbonate         (may contain
     pH 1           lemons contain sulphate (Epsom (washing soda)             NaOH) pH can
                   citric acid pH 2-3 salts) pH 6.5-7.0        pH 11             be >12
                  rain water (pH 5.5
                                      C6H12O6 sugar pH
                   normal, down to                       toothpaste pH 8
                                              7
                  3.5 when polluted)
                                       C2H5OH ethanol
                        milk Ph 6                          bleach pH 11
                                        (alcohol) pH 7
                                                         Ca(OH)2 calcium
                    wine/beer pH 6                           hydroxide
                                                        (limewater) pH 10
                                                              Mg(OH)2
                                                            magnesium
                                                        hydroxide ('milk of
                                                        magnesia') pH 10
ROLE OF WATER IN SHOWING THE
  PROPERTIES OF ACID/ALKALI
TRY OUT QUESTION 1 (a) and (b)
Chemical properties of acids
                               18
             Burning
             wooden
             Splinter
 Alkali                             Lime
                            acid    water
Acid      Acid
                        Calcium
          Metal         carbonate
Reaction of acids with reactive metal
 Produces salt and hydrogen gas.
 Metal, M must more electropositive (upper part) than
  hydrogen in the Electrochemical Series.
 Chemical equation:
                M + HX → MX + H2
                 metal   acid     salt   hydrogen gas
QUESTION:
Describe one chemical test that can be used to identify the
presence of an acid.
Procedures:
1. Pour [2 – 5] cm3 of hydrochloric acid solution into a test tube.
2. Add magnesium powder into the test tube.
3. Put a burning wooden splinter near the mouth of the test tube.
4. Record the observation.
Chemical equations:
Mg + 2HCl → MgCl2 + H2
Observation:
Colourless bubble gas release. A “pop” sound heard
Conclusion:
Hydrogen gas produces
Other Metal: Magnesium strip, Zinc powder/strip
Reaction of acids with metal carbonate
 Produces salt, water and carbon dioxide gas.
 Chemical equation:
         MCO32- + HX → MX + H2O + CO2
     metal carbonate acid       salt   water       carbon
                                                 dioxide gas
 QUESTION:
 Describe one chemical test that can be used to identify the
 presence of an acid.
Procedures:
1. Pour 3 cm3 of hydrochloric acid solution into a test tube.
2. Add calcium carbonate powder into the test tube.
3. Pass through the gas liberated into lime water.
Chemical equations:
2HCl + CaCO3 → CaCl2 + CO2 + H2O
Observation:
Colourless bubble gas release.
Lime water turns chalky/cloudy
Conclusion:
Carbon dioxide gas produces
                Red
                litmus
                paper
       Alkali                   ammonia
                                 Alkali +   Metal ion
Acid                             ammonium   + alkali
                         Heat    salt
Reaction of alkalis with ammonium salt
 Heated and produces ammonia gas.
 Chemical equation:
        NH4+X + MOH → MX + NH3 + H2O
    Ammonium saltalkalis      salt ammonia gas
                                 Observation:
                                 Colourless bubble gas release;
                                 Pungent smell
Reaction of alkalis with metal ion
 Most metal hydroxides are insoluble in water.
 The reactions of metal ions with the hydroxides ion
  produce precipitation of insoluble metal hydroxide.
 Chemical equation:
         M+1X- + M+2OH- → M+1OH- + M+2X-
  Concentration/ mol                    pH value
  dm-3               Exp. I                    Exp. II
                     (Sodium hydroxide)        (Ammonia solution)
        0.1          13                        11
  Explain why sodium hydroxide solution and ammonia solution have
  different pH value.
P1: Sodium hydroxide solution is a strong alkali while ammonia
solution is a weak alkali.
P2: Sodium hydroxide ionise completely in water to produce
high concentration of hydroxide ion, OH-
P3: Ammonia ionise partially in water to produce low
concentration of hydroxide ion, OH-
P4: The higher the pH value, the higher the concentration of
hydroxide ion, OH-                                             27
TRY OUT QUESTION 1 (c)
  QUESTION 2(a, b, c)
CONCENTRATION ???????
                        29
Concentration of acids & alkalis
                            Is the Quantity of solute in a
                               given volume of solution
unit
      for molarity
(mol
       dm-3) or molar (M)
                                                              30
Relationship between concentration and
               molarity
                 ÷ molar mass
 concentration                         Molarity
   (g dm-3)                           (mol dm-3)
                  x molar mass
Refer to examples in text book page 124.
                                                   31
 Concentrations of acids and alkalis
M = Concentration in mol dm-3 [Molarity]
V = Volume in cm3
1000 cm3 = 1 dm3
                                           34
    Preparation of standard solutions
  A solution in which
its concentration is
   accurately known is called
   standard solution.
                                        35
Dilution of solution
                                       90 cm3
                               distilled water added
                                                       Only for dilution
         M1V1 = M2V2                                   purpose involved
                                                        same solution
M1 = Molarity of original solution / mol dm-3
V1 = Volume of original solution / cm3
M2 = Molarity of the diluted solution / mol dm-3
V2 = Volume of original solution + volume of water added /cm3
 Neutralisation – Acid Base Titration
   Acid                 Alkali
                        + phenolphthalein
                 Pink                        Colourless
                   Acid + Alkali → Salt + Water
End point – the point in the titration at which the indicators
changes colour.
 Indicator                         Colour in medium
                         Alkali        Neutral            Acid
 Methyl orange           Yellow        Orange             Red
 Phenophthalein           Pink        Colourless      Colourless
DO YOU KNOW THAT NEUTRALISATION IS
     USED IN OUR DAILY LIFE ???
                                     38
 NEUTRALISATION IN DAILY LIFE :
1. Agriculture : acidic soil is treated
                 with CaO
1.   Industries : ammonia solution is used to
     prevent coagulation of latex
3. Health :
 a) Baking powder (NaHCO3) is used
      to treat bee stings
 b) Toothpaste is used to neutralise
                                                39
       acid in the mouth
This formula involve acid
      and base only
                            Acid-base Titration
TRY OUT QUESTION 1 (d)
    QUESTION 2(d)