Chapter 16

36
Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

description

Chapter 16. Acid-Base Equilibria. constant. Dissociation of water. Autoionization or autoprotolysis. Ion-product constant Autoprotolysis constant. K w = [H + ][OH - ] = 1.0x10 -14 When [H + ] = [OH - ] neutral. Doesn’t usually happen. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter 16

Page 1: Chapter 16

Chapter 16

Acid-Base Equilibria

Page 2: Chapter 16

Dissociation of water

Autoionization or autoprotolysis

Ion-product constantAutoprotolysis constant

-(aq)(aq)(l)2 OHHOH

]][OHH[K

O]H[

]][OH[HK

-w

2

-

constant

Page 3: Chapter 16

Kw = [H+][OH-] = 1.0x10-14

When [H+] = [OH-] neutral. Doesn’t usually happen.

As one increases, the other decreases; the product must equal 1.0x10-14.

When

[H+] > [OH-] acidic

[OH-] > [H+] basic

Page 4: Chapter 16

H+ is a proton with no electrons.In water:

H

HOH

Hydronium ion

Page 5: Chapter 16

Bronstead-Lowry Acid-Base

Acid - Can donate a proton

Base - Can accept a proton

*Doesn’t have to be in H2O. Can be in other solvents.

Page 6: Chapter 16

Conjugate Acid-Base Pairs

(aq)3-(aq)(l)2(aq) OHAOHHA

conj base

conj base

conj acid

conj acid

(aq)(aq)(l)23(aq) OHNH4OHNH

(aq)3-2(aq)(l)22(aq) OHNOOHHNO

Page 7: Chapter 16

The stronger an acid, the weaker its conjugate base.

The weaker an acid, the stronger its conjugate base.

Page 8: Chapter 16

pH scale

pH = -log [H+]

Remember

Kw = (1x10-7)(1x10-7) = 1.0x10-14

pH = -log [H+] = -log (1x10-7)

pH = 7 (neutral)

[H+] pH

acidic > 1.0x10-7 < 7.00

basic < 1.0x10-7 > 7.00

Page 9: Chapter 16

You can also speak in terms of [OH-]

pOH = -log [OH-]

= 14 - pH

Because

pH + pOH = -log Kw = 14

Page 10: Chapter 16

Measure pH by

pH meter

Acid-base indicators

Litmus

red = pH < 5

blue = pH > 8

Figure 16.7 shows several acid-base indicators and their ranges

Page 11: Chapter 16

Strong Acids and Bases

Strong electrolytes

Completely ionize

HA + H2O A- + H3O+

Bases form hydroxides in solvent

Page 12: Chapter 16

In H2O, Alkali metal hydroxides

Alkaline earth metal

Hydroxides (except Be)

Many are insoluble

Also, substances that will abstract a H+ from H2O.

O2- + H2O 2OH-

Na2O or CaO would do this. O2-, H-, N3- bases that would do this.

Page 13: Chapter 16

Weak acids

-(aq)(aq)(aq) AH HA

Only partially ionize

[HA]

]][A[HK

-

a

Acid dissociation constant

Page 14: Chapter 16

Larger Ka means stronger acid. ex.

N

O

C - O - H

O=

0.020M solutionpH = 3.26? Ka

pH = -log [H+] = 3.26[H+] = 5.50x10-4

Page 15: Chapter 16

N

O

C - OH

O=

N

O

C - O

O=

+ H+

HA A- H+

1:1

a

24-5-

4-

need stillthis

4-4-

a

-

a

K(0.0195)

)(5.5x101.55x10

[HA]0.0195MM)(5.5x10-M020.0

? [HA]

]][5.5x10[5.5x10K

[HA]

]][A[HK

Page 16: Chapter 16

Can calculate pH in same manner if you have Ka and concentration of solution.

Let’s use niacin again.

N

O

C - OH

O=

N

O

C - O

O=+ H+

HA A- H+

x)-(0.010

[HA]][H

(x)

][A

(x)

1.5x10

pH ?solution 0.010M1.5x10K

-5-

-5a

Page 17: Chapter 16

x)-(0.010

x1.5x10

25

** Simplifying Assumption **

x is very very small compared to 0.010M

sooooooooo,

ignore x in denominator

4-7-2

7-5-2

5-2

3.9x10x1.5x10x

1.5x10)(0.010)(1.5x10x

x105.10.010

x

Page 18: Chapter 16

pH = -log [H+]

x = [H+] = 3.9x10-4

pH = 3.41

What percent of niacin molecules ionized?

3.9%100x 0.010

x109.3 -4

Page 19: Chapter 16

Polyprotic Acids

ex. H2SO4 H3PO4 H2SeO4

H2SO4 H+ + HSO4-

Ka1 = 1.7x10-2

HSO4- H+ + SO4

2-

Ka2 = 6.4x10-8

Ka1 always larger than Ka2

If Ka1/ Ka2 103, can estimate pH by Ka1 only.

Page 20: Chapter 16

Weak Bases

ex. Amines

“an organic substituted ammonia”

ammoniaNH3

N

H

HH NH

CH3

H

methyl amine

Page 21: Chapter 16

N

H

CH3 + H2O H N

H

CH3 + OH-H

H

ClO- + H2O HClO + OH-

Kb = 3.3x10-7

][ClO

][HClO][OHx103.3

-

-7-

Can use this in the same manner in which you used Ka.

Anions of weak acids

Page 22: Chapter 16

Ka and Kb

How are they related?

][NH

]][OH[NHK

][NH

]][H[NHK

OHNHOHNH

HNHNH

3

-4

b4

3a

-(aq)4(aq)(l)23(aq)

(aq)3(aq)4(aq)

Page 23: Chapter 16

-(aq)(aq)(l)2

-(aq)4(aq)(l)23(aq)

(aq)3(aq)4(aq)

OHHOH

OHNHOHNH

HNHNH

1)

2)

3)

When two reactions are added together, the equilibrium constant for the third reaction is given by the product of equilibrium constants of equations 1 and 2.

Page 24: Chapter 16

K1 x K2 = K3

rxn 1 rxn 2 rxn 3

w-

3

-4

4

3ba

K]][OH[H

][NH

]][OH[NH

][NH

]][H[NHKK

Page 25: Chapter 16

Special Case

Ka x Kb = Kw

For conjugate acid-base pairs.

Page 26: Chapter 16

Bond polarity and Bond strength effect on Acid-base behavior: In binary acids

polarity(across a row) acidity

bond strength(in a group) acidity

stability of conj. base acidity

Page 27: Chapter 16

Metal hydrides are basic or show no acid/base properties in H2O.

Nonmetal hydrides are acidic or show no acid/base properties in H2O (except NH3)

Acidity increases moving down a group.

Page 28: Chapter 16

Oxyacids

H O S

O

O

O

HHave unprotonated and protonated oxygens.

Y O H H3PO4

• As electronegativity of Y increases, acidity increases.

• As number of unprotonated oxygens increases, acidity increases (effect of formal charge and oxidation number)

•Ex. HClO, HClO2, HClO3, HClO4

Page 29: Chapter 16

Carboxylic Acids

RC

OH

O COOH = Carboxyl group

R = H or an organic group.

The more electron withdrawing R is, the greater the acidity (this stabilizes anion and weakens O-H bond)

ex.

CH C

H

H O

OH

Acetic acidKa = 1.8x10-5

CF C

F

F O

OH

Trifluoroacetic acidKa = 5.0x10-1

Page 30: Chapter 16

Lewis Acids and Bases

This is a completely different definition for acid/base chemistry than what you have seen thus far!!!

Lewis acid = electron pair acceptor

Lewis base = electron pair ‘donor’

Not giving them away, just has them available to ‘share’.

Page 31: Chapter 16

H+ Bronstead-Lowry acid

also a Lewis acid

H+ electron pair acceptor

OH -

Electron pair donorLewis basealso Bronstead-Lowry base

Page 32: Chapter 16

B

H H

H

BH3 not a Bronstead-Lowry acid, but it’s a Lewis acid

Incomplete Octet

N

H

H

H

Lewis Basehas an electron pair available to attack an area that is e- deficient

Page 33: Chapter 16

Transition metal ions are often Lewis Acids. They have vacant d orbitals. (s and p also)

3

6

_3

NCFe

NC6Fe

H

HO

O = C = O Can be a Lewis Acid because e- density around the C is bound in just 2 directions.

Page 34: Chapter 16

H

HO

=

=

O

O

C

H

HO

=

=

O

O

C

H

H O

=

=

O

O

CCarbonic acid

Hydrolysis of metal ions

Metal ions have positive charge so they attract the lone e- pair on H2O molecules

Page 35: Chapter 16

6 ofthese

HO

H Fe3+H

OH

HO

H

HO

H

HO

H

H

O

H

H

O

H

Fe

3+

Because the metal is (+), e- density of H2O moves toward the metal. When this happens, there is less e- density in water’s O-H bonds, so H+ can come off easier… pH will drop.

Page 36: Chapter 16

The higher the charge density of the metal ion, the greater the acidity of its aqua complex.

OHin acidity stronger radius ionicsmaller

charge )(greater soooo

radius ionic

chargedensity charge

2