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Summary A LEVEL CHEMISTRY NOTES - Acid Base Equilibria

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- Detailed A - Level Chemistry Notes - Clear, detailed with diagrams for ease of understanding - Covers all specifications points to ensure all content is covered Includes : - titration curves - strong and weak acids/bases - pH calculations - titration curves and indicators - acidic and basic buffers with calculations |Disclaimer| This document and its content are copyright of StudyingAcademia. All rights reserved. This document is subject to copyright under UK law and is intended only for the individual who purchased them. You may not, except with my express written permission, distribute or commercially exploit the content. Nor may you transmit or store it in any other website or form of electronic retrieval system. Doing so, would be a breach of law and a punishable offence. Once the document has been sent to you, there’s no refunds as this is a digital product. On Etsy as StudyingAcademia

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Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Bronsted Lowry
Acids = proton donors
Bases = proton acceptors



When acids are mixed with water, hydrogen ions are released. These H+ ions form hydroxonium
ions (H₃O+) which make the solution acidic



HA(aq) + H₂O(l) ⇌ H₃O+(aq) + A-(aq)


HA is the acid and H₂O is the base in the forward reaction. In the reverse reaction H₃O+ is the acid
and A- is the base
HA and A- are a conjugate acid base pair
H₂O and H₃O+ are a conjugate acid base pair

Water acts as a base when an acid is added to it
When bases are mixed with water, hydroxide ions are released.

B(aq) + H₂O(l) ⇌ BH+ + OH-


When a solution is a base this means it has a larger concentration of hydroxide ions than hydrogen
ions.
When acids and bases react with water, the reaction is reversible
Acid-base reactions involve transfer of protons



Conjugate pairs

linked by transfer of a proton

HA + B ⇌ BH+ + A-


HA is the acid in the forward reaction as it is donating a proton and A- is the base in the reverse
reaction as it accepts a proton from BH+ to form HA.
When an acid donates a proton, the species formed is its conjugate base
When a base accepts a proton, the species formed is its conjugate acid



Acid base reactions

,When acids react with bases, salts are formed which are pH neutral.
Overall ionic equation : H+ + OH- ⇌ H2O


Salts are made from the metal from the base (or ammonium ion) and the non metal (other than
hydrogen) from the acid

HCl + LiOH → LiCl + H2O

Ammonia doesn’t have hydroxide ions so needs to react with water rst. It accepts a proton to
produce ammonium ions and hydroxide ions.
NH3 + H2O ⇌ NH4+ + OH-
2NH3 + H2SO4 ⇌ (NH4)2SO4


Note that with ammonia’s neutralisation reaction, water is not produced




fi

, pH
a measure of hydrogen ion concentration
Lower the pH, higher the concentration of hydrogen ions




Strong acid

a large amount of the strong acid dissociates
Equilibrium lies well over to the right favouring the forward reaction
Lots of H+ ions are formed
Concentration of monoprotic acid = concentration of H+ ions as we assume all the H+ ions produced
have come from the acid



Calculating pH of a strong acid (assume they fully dissociate)

Work out pH of 0.1 mol dm-3 hydrochloric acid. HCl is a strong acid so nearly 100% dissociation. 1
mole of HCl has 1 mole of hydrogen ions so if the concentration of the acid 0.1 mol dm-3 then the
concentration of hydrogen ions is 0.1 mol dm-3

-log10[H+] = 1

pH = -log10[H+]
[H+] = 10-pH

Monoprotic and polyprotic acids

Polyprotic acid - acids that donate more than one proton

Nitric acid is monoprotic as 1 mole of HNO₃ will produce 1 mole of H+ ions
Sulfuric acid is diprotic as 1 mole of H₂SO₄ will produce 2 moles of H+ ions.
Phosphoric acid is triprotic as 1 mole to H₃PO₄ will produce 3 moles of H+ ions

Diprotic acids dissociate to produce two H+ ions for every acid molecule.
concentration of 2 x [HA] = [H+]



pH of diprotic acid example

Calculate the pH of 0.25 mol dm-3 of sulfuric acid

[H+] = 2[H₂SO₄ ]
0.25 mol dm-3 of acid produces 0.50 mol dm-3 of H+ ions.

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