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Overview of Acids and Bases

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    32644
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    By the 1884 definition of Svante Arrhenius (Sweden), an acid is a material that can release a proton or hydrogen ion (H+). Hydrogen chloride in water solution ionizes and becomes hydrogen ions and chloride ions. If that is the case, a base, or alkali, is a material that can donate a hydroxide ion (OH-). Sodium hydroxide in water solution becomes sodium ions and hydroxide ions. By the definition of both Thomas Lowry (England) and J.N. Brønsted (Denmark) working independently in 1923, an acid is a material that donates a proton and a base is a material that can accept a proton. Was Arrhenius erroneous? $| 8-) No. The Arrhenius definition serves well for a limited use. We are going to use the Arrhenius definitions most of the time. The Lowry- Brønsted definition is broader, including some ideas that might not initially seem to be acid and base types of interaction. Every ion dissociation that involves a hydrogen or hydroxide ion could be considered an acid- base reaction. Just as with the Arrhenius definition, all the familiar materials we call acids are also acids in the Lowry - Brønsted model. The G.N. Lewis (1923) idea of acids and bases is broader than the Lowry - Brønsted model. The Lewis definitions are: Acids are electron pair acceptors and bases are electron pair donors.

    Introduction

    We can consider the same idea in the Lowry - Brønsted fashion. Each ionizable pair has a proton donor and a proton acceptor. Acids are paired with bases. One can accept a proton and the other can donate a proton. Each acid has a proton available (an ionizable hydrogen) and another part, called the conjugate base. When the acid ionizes, the hydrogen ion is the acid and the rest of the original acid is the conjugate base. Nitric acid, HNO3, dissociates (splits) into a hydrogen ion and a nitrate ion. The hydrogen almost immediately joins to a water molecule to make a hydronium ion. The nitrate ion is the conjugate base of the hydrogen ion. In the second part of the reaction, water is a base (because it can accept a proton) and the hydronium ion is its conjugate acid.

    HNO3 + H2O ===> (NO3)- + (H3O)+
    ACID BASE CONJUGATE
    BASE
    CONJUGATE
    ACID

    In a way, there is no such thing as a hydrogen ion or proton without anything else. They just don't exist naked like that in water solution. Remember that water is a very polar material. There is a strong partial negative charge on the side of the oxygen atom and a strong partial positive charge on the hydrogen side. Any loose hydrogen ion, having a positive charge, would quickly find itself near the oxygen of a water molecule. At close range from the charge attraction, the hydrogen ion would find a pair (its choice of two pairs) of unshared electrons around the oxygen that would be capable of filling the its outer shell. Each hydrogen ion unites with a water molecule to produce a hydronium ion, (H3O)+, the real species that acts as acid. The hydroxide ion in solution does not combine with a water molecule in any similar fashion. As we write reactions of acids and bases, it is usually most convenient to ignore the hydronium ion in favor of writing just a hydrogen ion.

    PROPERTIES OF ACIDS

    For the properties of acids and bases we will use the Arrhenius definitions.

    • Acids release a hydrogen ion into water (aqueous) solution.
    • Acids neutralize bases in a neutralization reaction. An acid and a base combine to make a salt and water. A salt is any ionic compound that could be made with the anion of an acid and the cation of a base. The hydrogen ion of the acid and the hydroxide ion of the base unite to form water.Acids corrode active metals. Even gold, the least active metal, is attacked by an acid, a mixture of acids called 'aqua regia,' or 'royal liquid.' When an acid reacts with a metal, it produces a compound with the cation of the metal and the anion of the acid and hydrogen gas.
    • Acids turn blue litmus to red. Litmus is one of a large number of organic compounds that change colors when a solution changes acidity at a particular point. Litmus is the oldest known pH indicator. It is red in acid and blue in base. The phrase, 'litmus test,' indicates that litmus has been around a long time in the English language. Litmus does not change color exactly at the neutral point between acid and base, but very close to it. Litmus is often impregnated onto paper to make 'litmus paper.'
    • Acids taste sour. TASTING LAB ACIDS IS NOT PERMITTED BY ANY SCHOOL. The word 'sauer' in German means acid and is pronounced almost exactly the same way as 'sour' in English. (Sauerkraut is sour cabbage, cabbage preserved in its own fermented lactic acid. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sauerkraut http://www.wildfermentation.com/resources.php?page=sauerkraut) Stomach acid is hydrochloric acid. Although tasting stomach acid is not pleasant, it has the sour taste of acid. Acetic acid is the acid ingredient in vinegar. Citrus fruits such as lemons, grapefruit, oranges, and limes have citric acid in the juice. Sour milk, sour cream, yogurt, and cottage cheese have lactic acid from the fermentation of the sugar lactose.

    PROPERTIES OF BASES

    • Bases release a hydroxide ion into water solution. (Or, in the Lowry - Brønsted model, cause a hydroxide ion to be released into water solution by accepting a hydrogen ion in water.)
    • Bases neutralize acids in a neutralization reaction. The word - reaction is: Acid plus base makes water plus a salt.
    • Where 'Y' is the anion of acid 'HY,' and 'X' is the cation of base 'XOH,' and 'XY' is the salt in the product, the reaction is: HY + XOH ===> HOH + XY
    • Bases denature protein. This accounts for the "slippery" feeling on hands when exposed to base. Strong bases that dissolve in water well, such as sodium or potassium lye are very dangerous because a great amount of the structural material of human beings is made of protein. Serious damage to flesh can be avoided by careful use of strong bases.
    • Bases turn red litmus to blue. This is not to say that litmus is the only acid - base indicator, but that it is likely the oldest one.
    • Bases taste bitter. There are very few food materials that are alkaline, but those that are taste bitter. It is even more important that care be taken in tasting bases. Again, NO SCHOOL PERMITS TASTING OF LAB CHEMICALS. Tasting of bases is more dangerous than tasting acids due to the property of stronger bases to denature protein.

    STRONG ACIDS AND STRONG BASES

    The common acids that are almost one hundred percent ionized are:
    HNO3 - nitric acid
    HCl - hydrochloric acid
    H2SO4 - sulfuric acid
    HClO4 - perchloric acid
    HBr - hydrobromic acid
    HI - hydroiodic acid

    The acids on this short list are called strong acids, because the amount of acid quality of a solution depends upon the concentration of ionized hydrogens. You are not likely to see much HBr or HI in the lab because they are expensive. You are not likely to see perchloric acid in a school setting because it can explode if not treated carefully. Other acids are incompletely ionized, existing mostly as the unionized form. Incompletely ionized acids are called weak acids, because there is a smaller concentration of ionized hydrogens available in the solution. Do not confuse this terminology with the concentration of acids. The differences in concentration of the entire acid will be termed dilute or concentrated. Muriatic acid is the name given to an industrial grade of hydrochloric acid that is often used in the finishing of concrete.

    In the list of strong acids, sulfuric acid is the only one that is diprotic, because it has two ionizable hydrogens per formula (or two mols of ionizable hydrogen per mol of acid). (Sulfuric acid ionizes in two steps. The first time a hydrogen ion splits off of the sulfuric acid, it acts like a strong acid. The second time a hydrogen splits away from the sulfate ion, it acts like a weak acid.) The other acids in the list are monoprotic, having only one ionizable proton per formula. Phosphoric acid, H3PO4, is a weak acid. Phosphoric acid has three hydrogen ions available to ionize and lose as a proton, and so phosphoric acid is triprotic. We call any acid with two or more ionizable hydrogens polyprotic.

    Likewise, there is a short list of strong bases, ones that completely ionize into hydroxide ions and a conjugate acid. All of the bases of Group I and Group II metals except for beryllium are strong bases. Lithium, rubidium and cesium hydroxides are not often used in the lab because they are expensive. The bases of Group II metals, magnesium, calcium, barium, and strontium are strong, but all of these bases have somewhat limited solubility. Magnesium hydroxide has a particularly small solubility. Potassium and sodium hydroxides both have the common name of lye. Soda lye (NaOH) and potash lye (KOH) are common names to distinguish the two compounds.

    LiOH1 - lithium hydroxide
    NaOH1 - sodium hydroxide
    KOH1 - potassium hydroxide
    RbOH1 - rubidium hydroxide
    CsOH1 - cesium hydroxide
    Mg(OH)2 - magnesium hydroxide
    Ca(OH)2 - calcium hydroxide
    Sr(OH)2 - strontium hydroxide
    Ba(OH)2 - barium hydroxide

    The bases of Group I metals are all monobasic. The bases of Group II metals are all dibasic. Aluminum hydroxide is tribasic. Any material with two or more ionizable hydroxyl groups would be called polybasic. Most of the alkaline organic compounds (and some inorganic materials) have an amino group -(NH2) rather than an ionizable hydroxyl group. The amino group attracts a proton (hydrogen ion) to become -(NH3)+. (The dash before the (NH3)+ or (NH2) indicates a single bonding electron, so this is attached to something else by a covalent bond.) By the Lowry- Brønsted definition, an amino group definitely acts as a base, and the effect of removing hydrogen ions from water molecules is the same as adding hydroxide ions to the solution.

    Memorize the strong acids and strong bases. Other acids or bases are weak.

    SOLUBILITY AND DISSOCIATION

    Now, after considering the bases of Group II metals, is a fine time to think about acidity of a solution and the solubility of the compound. Calcium and magnesium hydroxides are used in antacids, materials used to combat gastrointestinal acidity. How can that be if they are strong bases? In order to act as a base, the material must be dissolved. Almost all of these bases that are dissolved are dissociated, or ionized, but the low solubility of these bases makes them safe to swallow. An acid or base must first dissolve before it can dissociate (come apart) or ionize (become a pair of ions).

    It is important to notice that just because a compound has a hydrogen or an -OH group as a part of the structure does not mean that it can be an acid or a base. The hydrogens of methane, CH4, are all very covalently attached to the carbon atom, and the hydrogens do not ionize, so methane is not an acid.. Glycerin (or glycerol) has three -OH groups in its structure, but the -OH groups do not separate as an ion, so glycerin is not a base.

    CH2OH
    |
    CHOH
    |
    CH2OH

    These are alcoholic -OH groups attached to a carbon atom. THE AVAILABILITY OF THE HYDROXIDE OR HYDROGEN AS AN ION DEPENDS UPON WHAT IT IS ATTACHED TO.

    The chemical equation for the dissociation of nitric acid is:

    For strong acids and strong bases the equation goes completely to the right. There is none of the original acid or base, but only the ions of the material unattached to each other in the water.

    OVERVIEW OF pH

    pH is just an easy way to express how acidic or alkaline a water solution is. The pH of a solution is the negative log of the hydrogen ion concentration. The hydrogen ion concentration is inversely proportional to the hydroxide ion concentration, and the two of them multiplied together give the number 1 E-14. The table below shows the relationship among these measurements at the integers.

    comments

    [H+]

    pH

    pOH

    [OH-]

    very base E-14 14 0 E-0
    E-13 13 1 E-1
    base E-12 12 2 E-2
    E-11 11 3 E-3
    slightly base E-10 10 4 E-4
    E-9 9 5 E-5
    E-8 8 6 E-6
    NEUTRAL E-7 7 7 E-7
    E-6 6 8 E-8
    E-5 5 9 E-9
    slightly acid E-4 4 10 E-10
    E-3 3 11 E-11
    acid E-2 2 12 E-12
    E-1 1 13 E-13
    very acid E-0 0 14 E-14

    THE pH BOX

    The pH box is a similar sort of self-torture device to the temperature box. In each box, all four of the measurements are different ways to express exactly the same condition. The Kw of water, the dissociation constant, is a natural number amazingly close to 1 E-14. That is, when you multiply the hydrogen ion concentration [H+] by the hydroxide ion concentration [(OH)-] in pure water at near room temperature, the number is 1 E-14. If you know the [(OH)-], you know the [H+] and vice-versa. These two measurements are not the same scale, but they are two different measurements of the same thing. The pH is just the negative log of the [H+] and the pOH is just the negative log of the [(OH)-]. The final leg of the box is the relationship between the pH and pOH, and that is the easiest one. pH + pOH = 14 because this is the exponential form of the Kw equation.

    The hardest part of working the pH box is doing the "number crunching." The math is easier on a scientific calculator. Only a masochist would think about trying to do the computations by hand with a log table. Due to the large number of differences among hand calculators, there is a limit to the amount of help Chemtutor can give you in calculator work, but there are a few tips we can lend you.

    SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR USE WITH pH BOX

    Click for instructions on how to use a graphing calculator.

    The calculator can be somewhat unfriendly in the math of the pH box. Let’s take an example of using the box. The pH table before the pH box makes integer pH calculations easy, but the calculator is best used on non-integer pH's. The best way to understand this is to get your calculator and follow the calculations step - by - step on your own machine. There are some big differences among calculators, so get used to your own calculator before you try to use someone else's.

    [H+] = 2.75 E-6

    Start with [H+] = 2.75 E-6. Input 2 . 7 5 E +/- 6. To get the pH, punch 'log' (not ln, the natural log). The display shows -5.5607. The pH is the negative log, so it is 5.5607, rounded to 5.6, but you leave the -5.5607 on the display to keep going around the box.

    pH = 5.5607

    Punch + 1 4 = to add 14 to the negative pH. This will give you the pOH of 8.4393.

    pOH = 8.4393

    Punch the ‘change sign’ button, +/-. This changes 8.4393 to -8.4393. We need to get the antilog of -8.4393, and this function is not the same on many calculators. You may find a 2nd or an INV or shift or some other button to push before the log. My TI-30 SLR has INV on the button. Punch INV and then 'log' to get the [OH-]. You may see a number like: 0.000,000,004 on your display. What did you do wrong? The correct answer is 3.6364 E-9.

    [OH-] = 3.6364 E-9

    Why is the display lying to you? It isn't. The numbers are the same, but your calculator showed you the long form (because it COULD) that is a large number of place-holding zeros and a single significant digit. The calculator actually has that number in its memory to eight or ten or sixteen digits, but it chose to only show you one significant digit. You can see the other digits on the display by multiplying by E6 (1 E6) or E9 (1 E9), but if you want to keep going around the box, you need to divide by the same number (with as many significant digits as you can) to get the [OH-] back. Or, you could store the [OH-] number before you take a look at it. Your calculator should have a button marked STO or M+ or M1 that will store your number into memory. Do that before you peek at the number. To get back that stored number, you punch RCL or M-. To get back to the original [H+], punch in: 1 E +/- 1 4 ÷ RCL = . You should see your good old [H+] of 2.75 E-6 on the display.

    [H+] = 2.75 E-6

    Now for practice, go around the pH box the other way.

    The rules are:

    To get pH from [H+] or to get pOH from [OH-], use the negative of the log.

    To go from [OH-] to pOH or from [H+] to pH, use antilog of the negative number.

    To go from [H+] to [OH-] or back, first put in the Kw, 1E-14 and divide by the one you are leaving.

    To go from pH to pOH or back, subtract the number you have from 14.

    Proficiency in pH box calculations requires practice. You can make your own exercises and check your answers by going around the pH box and coming back to the same number and by going the other way around the pH box. You will use the pH box calculations in many problems in this acid - base section.

    WEAK ACIDS AND WEAK BASES

    We can write the chemical equation for the dissociation of a weak acid, using 'A-' to represent the conjugate base, as;

    HA ===> A- + H+

    And, similarly, we can write the chemical equation for the dissociation of a weak base, using 'X+' to represent the conjugate acid, as;

    XOH ===> (OH)- + X+

    The equilibrium expression for the dissociation of a weak acid is;

    In language, the equilibrium expression reads; "The dissociation constant of an acid is equal to the concentration of hydrogen ions times the concentration of the conjugate base of the acid divided by the concentration of un-ionized acid."

    Similarly, the equilibrium expression for a weak base reads: "The dissociation constant of a base equals concentration of hydroxide ions times concentration of conjugate acid divided by the concentration of un-ionized base."

    The kA of an acid or the kB of a base are properties of that acid or base at the given temperature. The temperature at which these dissociation constants are listed is usually near room temperature.

    The equilibrium expressions are for monoprotic acids or monobasic alkalis or the first dissociation of a polyprotic acid or a polybasic alkali. Phosphoric acid (H3PO4) is a good example of a polyprotic acid. When completely ionized, a mol of phosphoric acid will give three hydrogen ions and a phosphate ion, but the hydrogen ions come off one at a time at different pH's and with different kA's.

    H3PO4 ===> (H2PO4)- + H+ first ionization kA = 6.92 E-3
    (H2PO4)- ===> (HPO4)2- + H+ second ionization kA = 6.17 E-8
    (HPO4)2- ===> (PO4)3- + H+ third ionization kA = 2.09 E-12

    Any acid with more than one ionizable hydrogen or any base with more than one ionizable hydroxide will usually separate stepwise as phosphoric acid.

    THE pKA BOX

    The pKA of an acid is a very useful number, as you will see in the math below. The pKA is the negative log of the kA, the pKB is the negative log of the kB, and the pKA plus the pKB equal fourteen. The kA box is the same as the pH box, but substitute kA for [H+], pKA for pH, kB for [OH-], and pKB for pOH.

    pH OF STRONG ACIDS AND BASES

    Strong acids and bases have all of the dissolved material completely ionized. The concentration of a monoprotic acid is equal to the concentration of hydrogen ion. The concentration of a monobasic alkali is equal to the concentration of hydroxide ion. The actual concentration of hydrogen ion (or hydroxide ion) from pure water is on the order of concentration of E-7 Molar, so any concentration of a strong acid or base over E-5 Molar completely swamps the comparatively tiny amount of ion from the ionization of water.

    What is the pH of 0.0850 M HNO3? Nitric acid is a monoprotic strong acid. [HNO3] = [H+] and pH = - log [H+], so, pH = - log (0.085) = 1.07 Only one step on the pH box.

    What is the pH of 0.00765 KOH? Potassium hydroxide is a monobasic strong base. [KOH] = [OH-] and pOH = - log [OH-] and pH = 14 - pOH Or you could go around the pH box the other way. The pOH = 2.12 and pH = 11.88.

    WEAK ACIDS

    The following tables are published here for your convenience in working problems and seeing examples of weak acids and bases. There is no need for you to memorize the names, formulas, or numbers associated with these materials.

    ACID FORMULA kA pkA
    acetic acid H(C2H3O2) 1.74 E-5 4.76
    ascorbic acid (1) H2(C6H6O6) 7.94 E-5 4.10
    ascorbic acid (2) (HC6H6O6)- 1.62 E-12 11.79
    boric acid (1) H3BO3 5.37 E-10 9.27
    boric acid (2) (H2BO3)- 1.8 E-13 12.7
    boric acid (3) (HBO3)= 1.6 E-14 13.8
    butanoic acid H(C4H7O2) 1.48 E-5 4.83
    carbonic acid (1) H2CO3 4.47 E-7 6.35
    carbonic acid (2) (HCO3)- 4.68 E-11 10.33
    chromic acid (1) H2CrO4 1.82 E-1 0.74
    chromic acid (2) (HCrO4)- 3.24 E-7 6.49
    citric acid (1) H3(C6H5O7) 7.24 E-4 3.14
    citric acid (2) (H2C6H5O7)- 1.70 E-5 4.77
    citric acid (3) (HC6H5O7)= 4.07 E-7 6.39
    formic acid H(CHO2) 1.78 E-4 3.75
    heptanoic acid H(C7H13O2) 1.29 E-5 4.89
    hexanoic acid H(C6H11O2) 1.41 E-5 4.84
    hydrocyanic acid HCN 6.17 E-10 9.21
    hydrofluoric acid HF 6.31 E-4 3.20
    lactic acid H(C3H5O3) 8.32 E-4 3.08
    nitrous acid HNO2 5.62 E-4 3.25
    octanoic acid H(C8H15O2) 1.29 E-4 4.89
    oxalic acid (1) H2(C204) 5.89 E-2 1.23
    oxalic acid (2) (HC2O4)- 6.46 E-5 4.19
    pentanoic acid H(C5H9O2) 3.31 E-5 4.84
    phosphoric acid (1) H3PO4 6.92 E-3 2.16
    phosphoric acid (2) (H2PO4)- 6.17 E-8 7.21
    phosphoric acid (3) (HPO4)= 2.09 E-12 12.32
    propanoic acid H(C3H5O2) 1.38 E-5 4.86
    sulfuric acid (2) (HSO4)- 1.05 E-2 1.98
    sulfurous acid (1) H2SO3 1.41 E-2 1.85
    sulfurous acid (2) (HSO3)- 6.31 E-8 7.20
    uric acid H(C5H3N4O3) 1.29 E-4 3.89

    The organic acids in the table above have been written as acid with conjugate base as different from the standard notation. Notice that sulfuric acid's first ionization is a strong acid, so it is not on this table. Ascorbic acid is vitamin C. Some of the acids in the table are not very soluble, such as uric acid.

    An organic acid usually has a - COOH group in it. The shape of that group is more like;

    O = C _ OH
    |

    There is a double bond between the carbon and the single oxygen. There is a single bond with an alcohol group (-OH). There is one more bond to the central carbon that is usually attached to another carbon. The hydrogen of the alcohol group is the one that has a tendency to ionize away from the group, leaving a (-COO)- ion at the end of the acid.

    Notice the set of organic acids that begin with formic acid. Formic acid has a hydrogen attached to the carbon in the organic acid group. Acetic acid has a (-CH3) group attached to the carbon in the organic acid group. The line of carbons becomes longer for the acids that follow. There are no branched chains of carbon atoms or any double or triple bonds between the carbons of the organic acids on this list.

    The physiological organic acids (the organic acids that are found in living things) all have even numbers of carbons. Hexanoic, octanoic, and decanoic (C-6, C-8, and C-10 acids) are named for goats, which will give you an idea of the smell of those compounds.

    The name most used for the organic acid is in bold print in this table.

    SYSTEM NAME NUMBER OF CARBONS COMMON NAME
    methanoic acid 1 carbon formic acid
    ethanoic acid 2 carbons acetic acid
    propanoic acid 3 carbons propionic acid
    butanoic acid 4 carbons butyric acid
    pentanoic acid 5 carbons valeric acid
    hexanoic acid 6 carbons caproic acid
    heptanoic acid 7 carbons enanthic acid
    octanoic acid 8 carbons caprylic acid
    nonanoic acid 9 carbons pelargonic acid
    decanoic acid 10 carbons capric acid
    THE FOLLOWING ARE 'FATTY ACIDS'
    dodecanoic acid 12 carbons lauric acid
    tetradecanoic acid 14 carbons myristic acid
    hexadecanoic acid 16 carbons palmitic acid
    octadecanoic acid 18 carbons stearic acid
    eicosanoic acid 20 carbons arachidic
    tetracosanoic acid 24 carbons lignoceric

    Below are some of the molecular formulas of some of the organic acids in the stick and symbol form. The ionizable hydrogen is in blue.

    Organic acids with straight carbon even - number chains of twelve to twenty - four are called fatty acids. See soap for more on fatty acids. You can see that the pKA's are very close for all of the similar organic acids. Formic and acetic acids are water soluble. As the carbon chain increases in length, the molecule becomes less and less water soluble. Beginning with propanoic acid, even as the number of carbons increase, the pKA's do not change much.

    WEAK BASES

    Many materials are weak bases due to the presence of an amino group -(NH2) attached to an organic compound. Nitrogen has five electrons in the outside shell. The three solo electrons can participate in (covalent) bonds to the nitrogen. The unshared pair of electrons can be donated by the nitrogen atom to constitute a complete covalent bond with a material that lacks a pair of electrons. The Lewis definition most clearly shows that the donor of the pair of electrons (the N atom) is a base and anything that attaches to the nitrogen by accepting a position of covalent attachment to the nitrogen is an acid.

    BASE FORMULA kB pkB
    alanine C3H5O2NH2 7.41 E-5 4.13
    ammonia (water) NH3 (NH4OH) 1.78 E-5 4.75
    dimethylamine (CH3)2NH 4.79 E-4 3.32
    ethylamine C2H5NH2 5.01 E-4 3.30
    glycine C2H3O2NH2 6.03 E-5 4.22
    hydrazine N2H4 1.26 E-6 5.90
    methylamine CH3NH2 4.27 E-4 3.37
    trimethylamine (CH3)3N 6.31 E-5 4.20

    Alanine and glycine are amino acids, two of the twenty- or- so types of building blocks of protein. Each amino acid has both an amino (base) end and an acid end. Only the amino end (the base side) numbers are listed.

    THE 5% RULE

    The measurement and calculation of pH is not as accurate as some other of the chemical measures due to differences in temperature, other ions present, purity of solutes, concentration changes due to evaporation, etc. Measurement of pH in medicine, for instance must be at 37 degrees Celsius. There may be machines that claim to measure pH to hundredths or thousandths of a pH unit, but the standard that calibrates the machine may be off a little. A change of five percent in the hydrogen ion concentration will not change the pH more than a few hundredths of a pH unit. You try it on the calculator. Enter a number, say 0.001 and punch log. Now punch a number 95% or 105% of the first number (in this case, 0.00105 or 0.00095) and punch log. How different is the pH? Our answers in pH are going to be to the nearest tenth of a pH unit, so the hydrogen ion concentration needs to be only within 5% of an accurate number. This idea is the 'five percent rule.'

    You may remember we mentioned that the concentration of a strong acid is equal to the hydrogen ion concentration. That is not exactly so. In any water solution of an acid there is another source of hydrogen ions, the water. Water alone has a hydrogen ion concentration of E-7 Molar. Let's say you have a a E-5 M HCl solution, the contribution of the water is only a hundredth of the amount of hydrogen ion from the acid at the first approximation. You could approximate the real hydrogen ion concentration better by finding the hydroxide ion concentration of a solution with E-5 hydrogen ion concentration and then finding the added hydrogen ion concentration due to the dissociation of water from that. The total hydrogen ion concentration will be even further from having any significant contribution of hydrogen ion from the ionization of water. Does the ionization of water have an significance in this case? Of course not. There is much less than five percent difference between the two numbers. Here is an obvious situation where you can use the simpler approximation of the hydrogen ion concentration to find the pH. There are some times when the simpler approximation is not accurate enough. There are some times when you may be in doubt and would need to work it BOTH ways to show whether you can use a simplified method.

    Another way to state the five percent rule is: If you have a simplified way of solving for the hydrogen ion concentration that would give you an answer you can show would be within 5% of the more accurate way of calculating it, you can use the simpler method.

    pH OF WEAK ACIDS AND BASES

    Weak acids and bases do not ionize very much, so the [H+] or [(OH)-] must be calculated by the equilibrium expression.

    This would be easy to know exactly, except that the [HA] is not always equal to the concentration of solute that actually went into the solution. The more accurate way to express the equilibrium expression would be to include in the denominator the idea that the [HA] is really the concentration of solute originally put into solution minus the amount of that solute that ionized. We could represent the amount that ionized by either the [A-] or the [H+], so the denominator should be either [HA] - [A-] or [HA] - [H+]. Let's use the second option for alternative denominator because we want to solve for the hydrogen ion concentration. By the 5% rule, [HA] = [HA] - [H+] only if the hydrogen ion concentration is less than five percent of the total solute concentration. This is the case for most weak acids. The only exceptions are when the strongest of the weak acids are in the most dilute solutions.

    If you have a stronger weak acid (one with a high kA), you should check to see if the [H+] is near 5% of the total solute concentration. If it is, you will have to use the alternative denominator in the equation and solve it for [H+] by quadratic equation.

    Heaven forefend the need for using a quadratic equation. (I would rather kiss a BIG alligator.) It's a lot easier if the [H+] is less than five percent of the [HA].

    If there is only water and a weak acid in the solution, each mol of the acid dissociates into only one mol of hydrogen ions and only one mol of conjugate base ions. [H+] = [A-] ! So;

    and solving for [H+]2,

    then taking the square root of both sides, you have [H+].

    Once you have the hydrogen ion concentration, you can go anywhere on the pH box.

    The same idea goes for a weak base as the only material in water solution. Start with the equilibrium expression and the conjugate acid ion being equal to the hydroxide concentration. You will start with the base equilibrium expression: >

    and solve for [OH-] to get;

    BUFFERS AND pH OF BUFFERS

    A buffer is a solution that resists changes in pH. A buffer is made with a weak acid and a soluble salt containing the conjugate base of the weak acid or a weak base and a soluble salt containing the conjugate acid of the weak base. Some examples of buffer material pairs are:

    acetic acid and sodium acetate,

    phosphoric acid and potassium phosphate,

    oxalic acid and lithium oxalate

    carbonic acid and sodium carbonate,

    or ammonium hydroxide and ammonium nitrate.

    A buffer is most effective in solutions of pH at or close to the pKA of the weak acid. (Or solutions of pOH at or close to the pKB of the weak base.) The most buffering capacity is available when the concentration of weak acid or base is close to the concentration of the conjugate ion and when the concentration of both is greatest.

    Thinking backwards, if you need a buffer at a particular pH lower than seven, chose the weak acid that has a pKA close to that pH and a conjugate base to go with it.

    We can start again from the equilibrium expression of the ionization of a weak acid or a weak base;

    In buffer solutions the concentration of hydrogen ion is not equal to the concentration of conjugate ion. The concentration of conjugate ion from the dissociation of the acid is negligible, so we can calculate as if all the conjugate ion comes from the salt. If the soluble salt has only one mol of conjugate ion per mol of salt, the concentration of conjugate ion is the same as the concentration of salt.

    The entrance to the pH box again is the hydrogen ion concentration. Solve for the hydrogen ion concentration if you need it, the pH of the solution, the pOH, or the hydroxide ion concentration.

    The Henderson-Hasselbalch (H-H) equation can be somewhat confusing, but it is nothing more than the negative log of the equation above, the equilibrium expression solved for the hydrogen ion concentration. If you know the equilibrium equation, know how to solve the equilibrium equation for the hydrogen ion concentration, and know how to convert the hydrogen ion concentration to the pH, you have it licked. If you really need the H-H equation for a test, it is best to make sure you are getting it right by deriving it from the equilibrium expression.

    -log[H+] = pH

    -logkA = pKA

    -log(1/[A-]) = +log[A-]

    -log([HA]) = -log[HA]

    Component-by-component, take the negative log of the equilibrium expression and change the multiplication to addition. (They are logs now.) You get:

    pH = pKA + log[A-] - log[HA], which is the same as;

    pH = pKA - log([HA]/[A-] ), the usual way you see the H-H equation.

    There are four perfectly correct ways to write the H-H equation. They are:

    An equimolar buffer is one in which the concentration of the weak acid (or base) is the same as the concentration of the conjugate ion. This may not seem particularly significant to you, but there are several important ideas that can be easily seen from it. Start with the ionization equilibrium expression and cancel the [HA] with the [A-]. This shows that in an equimolar buffer kA = [H+].

    This shows how a buffer works. As acid or base is added to a buffer solution, the buffer equilibrium will trade off [HA] with [A-] to come to a new equilibrium. When that happens, there will be a much smaller change in the hydrogen ion concentration than if the acid or base were added to an unbuffered solution.

    Now let's do a similar trick with the H-H equation. If [HA] = [A-], the term [HA]/[A-] = 1 and log 1 = 0, so pH = pKA.

    This indicates that in an equimolar buffer the pH = pKA and that the RATIO of the [HA] to the [A-] will determine the pH of the solution. The further the ratio gets from one to one, the further the pH gets from the pKA. The buffer has its greatest buffering power at the pKA of the weak acid (or base). The higher the concentration of both the weak acid and its conjugate ion, the more buffering power is available.

    TITRATION

    The word "titration" rhymes with "tight nation," and refers to a commonly used method of (usually) finding the concentration of an unknown liquid by comparing it with a known liquid. An acid-base titration is good to consider when learning the method, but there are more uses for the technique. The measure of oxalate ion using potassium permanganate in a warm acid environment is a good example of a redox titration. The Mohr titration is a determination of chloride concentration using known silver nitrate solution and sodium dichromate an indicator.

    A measured amount of the unknown material in a flask with indicator is usually combined with the known material from a buret (rhymes with "sure bet"). The buret is marked with the volume of liquid by a scale with zero on top and (usually) fifty milliliters on the bottom. The buret has some type of valve at the bottom that can dispense the contained liquid.

    It is not necessary to start the titration with the known liquid level in the buret at the zero mark, but the level must be within the portion of the buret that is marked. The buret on the left shows about 1.7 ml of the yellow liquid in it because the bottom of the meniscus is between the 1 and 2 mL markings and closer to the 2 mL mark. Most laboratory burets can be read to an accuracy of one hundredth of a milliliter. (The drawing on the left is a bit crude. Most burets show the ten divisions of a milliliter and you can interpolate between the marks.) One reads the buret by getting at eye level to the bottom of the meniscus (curve in the liquid) and comparing the bottom of the meniscus to the marks on the glass. A reading of the buret is taken before and at the end of the titration. The amount of know - concentration liquid used is the difference of the beginning and ending buret reading.

    The endpoint of the titration is usually shown by some type of indicator. A pH indicator is a material, usually an organic dye, that is one color above a characteristic pH and another color below that pH. There are many materials that can serve as pH indicators, each with its own ph range at which it changes color. Some have more than one color change at distinct pH's. Litmus and phenolphthalein are common pH indicators. Litmus is red in acid (below pH 4.7) and blue in base (above pH 8.1). Phenolphthalein (The second 'ph' is silent and the 'a' and both 'e's are long, if that is any help.) is clear in acid (below pH 8.4) and pink- purple in base (above pH 9.9). These ranges may seem large, but near the equivalence point, the point at which the materials are equal, there is a large change in pH. The equivalence point may not occur at pH 7, neutral pH, so the appropriate pH indicator must be chosen for the type of acid and base being titrated.

    The volume of the material of unknown concentration is known by how much is put into the reaction vessel. The concentration of the standard is known, and its volume is known from the measurement of liquid used in the titration.

    If you have a monobasic base and a monoprotic acid, the titration formula can be simplified to:

    if CA = the concentration of the acid and CB = the concentration of the base and VA = the volume of acid solution and VB = the volume of base, then,


    Back to the beginning of Acids and Bases.


    SALTS

    A salt is the combination of an anion (- ion) and a cation (a + ion). Another way to think of a salt is the combination of the anion of a certain acid combined with the cation of a certain base. The neutralization of potassium hydroxide with hydrochloric acid produces water and the salt, potassium chloride. In a solid salt, the ions are held together by the difference in charge. Solid salts usually make crystals, sometimes including specific molar amounts of water, called water of hydration into the crystal. If a salt dissolves in water solution, it usually dissociates (comes apart) into the anions and cations that make up the salt.

    Salts dissolved in water may not be at neutral pH. Table salt, NaCl, has a neutral pH in water, but baking soda, NaHCO3 is very alkaline when dissolved in water. Take a teaspoonful of baking soda on your hand, wet it, and completely wash your hands with it. (Baking soda is a really fine material for cleaning hands!) There is the hint of the slipperiness of bases on your hands that had to come from the baking soda.

    How can you predict the pH of a salt dissolved in water? The actual pH will depend on the type of anion and cation, the solubility of the salt, the temperature of the solution, and concentration of the salt if less than saturated. Here are the general rules:

    Salts made of the anion of a strong acid and the cation of a strong base will be neutral salts, that is, the water solution with this salt will have a pH of seven. (Example - sodium chloride)

    Salts made of the anion of a strong acid and the cation of a weak base will be acid salts, that is, the water solution with this salt will have a pH of less than seven. (Example - ammonium chloride)

    Salts made of the anion of a weak acid and a strong base will be an alkali salt. The pH of the solution will be over seven. (Example - sodium bicarbonate)

    It can be a bit more difficult to tell the pH of a salt solution if the salt is made of the anion of a weak acid and the cation of a weak base. Usually, the main determining factor is whether the weak acid is weaker than the weak base, but that is not always the case. For the purpose of the problems in the review section, you may say that the pH of a 'weak-weak' salt is indeterminate.

    TITRATION AND pH PROBLEMS

    THE FOLLOWING SALTS IN WATER SOLUTION WILL HAVE A pH OF 7, < 7(less than 7), > 7(more than 7), OR INDETERMINATE (I). FOR EACH PREDICT THE pH OF THE SOLUTION. Explanations

    1. Na2CO3 2. FeCl3 3. KNO3 4. NH4C2H3O2
    5. ZnSO4 6. Ba(NO3)2 7. RbF 8. CaBr2

    FIND THE pH OF THE FOLLOWING SOLUTIONS. Find kA's, pKA's, kB's, and pKB's on the tables above.

    9. 0.0115 M HCl 10. 0.0815 M NaOH 11. 0.00372 M Ba(OH)2
    12. 0.12 M HC2H3O2 13. 1.35 E-5 H3BO3 14. 0.255 M NH4OH
    15. 0.578 M H3PO4 16. 0.16 M HCl and 0.072 M phosphoric acid.
    17. 1.25 M acetic acid and 0.75 M potassium acetate.
    18. 0.788 M lactic acid and 1.27 M calcium lactate.
    19. 0.590 M ammonium hydroxide and 1.57 M ammonium chloride.
    20. Explain how to make 5 L of 0.15 M acetic acid-sodium acetate buffer at pH 5.00 if you have 1.00 Molar acetic acid and crystalline sodium acetate.

    FOLLOWING ARE TITRATION PROBLEMS. ASSUME THAT THE pH INDICATOR WILL BE THE RIGHT ONE TO BALANCE THE AMOUNT OF ACID AND BASE. SOME OF THE TITRATIONS ARE NOT ACID - BASE TITRATIONS. AGAIN ASSUME THERE IS AN INDICATOR THAT WILL TELL WHEN MOLAR AMOUNTS ARE MATCHED.

    21. 23.45 mL of 0.275 M sodium hydroxide was used to titrate against mL of acetic acid. What was the concentration in M of acetic acid?

    22. 17.05 mL of 0.247 M barium hydroxide was used to titrate against 10 mL of nitric acid. What was the concentration in M of nitric acid?

    23. 35.79 mL of 0.275 M sodium hydroxide was used to titrate against 15 mL of sulfuric acid. What was the concentration in M of sulfuric acid?

    24. 24.92 mL of 0.00199 M silver nitrate was used to titrate against 5 mL of sodium chloride solution. What was the concentration of NaCl?

    ANSWERS TO PROBLEMS

    1. > 7 2.< 7 3. 7 4. I 5. < 7
    6. 7 7. > 7 8. 7 9. 1.9 10. 12.9
    11. 11.9 12. 2.8 13. 6.8 14. 11.3 15. 1.2
    16. 0.8 17. 4.5 18. 3.6 19. 8.8
    20. Weigh 39.1 g of sodium acetate, measure 274 ml of the 1.00 Molar acetic acid and place into a 5 liter volumetric flask. Dissolve, then fill the volumetric flask to the line with distilled water and mix.
    21. 1.29 M 22. 0.842 M 23. 0.328 M 24. 9.92 E-3 M

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