Friday, August 30, 2019
Acids, Bases and Salts
A chemical substance (typically, a corrosive or sour-tasting liquid) that neutralizes alkalis, dissolves some metals, and turns litmus red. Ionic Dissociation: Dissociation in chemistry and biochemistry is a general process in which ionic compounds (complexes, or salts) separate or split into smaller particles, ions, or radicals, usually in a reversible manner. Strength of Acids: The strength of anà acidà refers to its ability or tendency to lose a proton. There are very few strong acids. A strong acid is one that completely ionizes inà water. In contrast a weak acid only partially dissociates.Examples of strong acidsà areà hydrochloric acidà (HCl),à hydroiodic acidà (HI),à hydrobromic acidà (HBr),à perchloric acidà (HClO4),à nitric acidà (HNO3) andà sulfuric acidà (H2SO4). In water each of these essentially ionizes 100%. The stronger an acid is, the more easily it loses a proton, H+. Two key factors that contribute to the ease of deprotonation are the à polarityà of the Hââ¬âA bond and the size of atom A, which determines the strength of the Hââ¬âA bond. Acid strengths are also often discussed in terms of the stability of the conjugate base. Sulfonic acids, which are organic oxyacids, are aà classà of strong acids.A common example is toluenesulfonic acidà (tosylic acid). Unlike sulfuric acid itself, sulfonic acids can be solids. Superacidsà are acids stronger than 100% sulfuric acid. Examples of superacids arefluoroantimonic acid,à magic acidà andà perchloric acid. Superacids can permanently protonate water to give ionic, crystallineà hydroniumà ââ¬Å"saltsâ⬠. Basicity of an Acid: Basicity of an acid refers to theà number of replaceable hydrogen atomsà in one molecule of the acid. 3 common types of Basicity of an acid Monobasic Definition: 1 molecule produceà 1 H+ ionà upon dissociation Example:à HCl, HNO3 Dissociation Equation: HCl(aq) ââ¬â> H+(aq) + Cl-(aq)Dibasic Definition: 1 molecule produceà 2 H+à ion upon dissociation Example:à H2SO4 Dissociation Equation: Figure it out yourself!! Tribasic Definition: 1 molecule produceà 3 H+à ion upon dissociation Example:à H3PO4 Dissociation Equation: H3PO4(aq) ââ¬â> 3H+(aq) + PO4 3-(aq) Alkali: An alkali is a base in an aqueous solution or a chemical compound which is water soluble and neutralizes or effervesces with acids and turns litmus blue; typically, a caustic or corrosive substance of this kind such as lime or soda. Examples of alkalis include NaOH (Sodium Hydroxide), NH3(Ammonia) and KOH (Potassium Hydroxide).Salt: Any chemical compound formed from the reaction of an acid with a base, with all or part of the hydrogen of the acid replaced by a metal or other cation. Bases: Aà baseà inà chemistryà is a substance that can acceptà hydrogen ionsà (protons) or more generally, donate electron pairs. A soluble base is referred to as anà alkalià if it contains and releases hydro xideà ionsà (OH? )à quantitatively. Theà Bronsted-Lowry theoryà defines bases asà proton(hydrogen ion) acceptors, while the more general Lewis theory defines bases asà electron pair donors, allowing otherà Lewis acidsà than protons to be included.Bases can beà thoughtà of as the chemical opposite ofà acids. A reaction between an acid and base is calledà neutralization. Bases and acids are seen as opposites because the effect of an acid is to increase theà hydronium ionà (H3O+)à concentrationà in water, whereas bases reduce this concentration. Bases and acids are typicallyà foundà inà aqueous solutionà forms. Aqueous solutions of bases react with aqueous solutions of acids to produceà waterà andà salts Ã
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