Strong acids, weak acids and their reactions Flashcards

1
Q

What do acids produce in water?

A
  • Protons
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2
Q

What do acids do in aqueous solutions?

A
  • Ionise

- H+ ions

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3
Q

What are examples of acids in water?

A
  • HCl –> H+ + Cl-

- HNO3 –> H+ + NO3-

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4
Q

What do strong acids do in water?

A
  • Ionise completely

- Particles dissociate to release H+ ions

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5
Q

What is an example of strong acids in water?

A

H2SO4 –> 2H+ + SO4^2-

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6
Q

What do weak acids do in water?

A
  • Do not fully ionise

- Small proportion of acid particles dissociate to release H+ ions

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7
Q

What is the ionisation of a weak acid?

A
  • Reversible reaction

- Sets up equilibrium between undissociated and dissociated acid

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8
Q

What is an example of weak acids in water?

A
  • CH3COOH H+ + CH3COO-
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9
Q

What is the pH of an acid or alkali?

A
  • Measure of concentration of H+ ions in solution
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10
Q

How are the pH values related to the concentration of H+ (aq) ions?

A
  • For every decrease of 1 pH, the concentration of H+ ions increase by a factor of 10
    Factor H+ ions concentration changes by = 10^-x (where x is difference in pH)
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11
Q

What is the pH of a strong acid and a weak acid of the same concentration?

A
  • pH of stronger acid is lower than weak acid
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12
Q

What does acid strength tell you?

A
  • What proportion of acid molecules ionise in water
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13
Q

What is concentration?

A
  • More solute in solution compared to water
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14
Q

What is a dilute solution?

A
  • More water compare to solutes
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15
Q

Give two examples of bases?

A
  • Metal oxide

- Hydroxide

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16
Q

Equation for soluble alkalis:

A
  • Acid + Metal oxide –> Salt + Water

- Acid + Metalhyroxide –> Salt + Water

17
Q

Hydrochloride + Copper oxide –>

A

Copper chloride + Water

18
Q

Sulfuric acid + Calcium hydroxide –>

A

Calcium Sulfate –> Water

19
Q

Nitric acid + Magnesium oxide –>

A

Magnesium nitrate + Water

20
Q

What do acids and metal carbonates produce?

A
  • Salt + Water + Carbon dioxide
21
Q

Equation for Acids and metal carbonates:

A

Acid + Metal carbonate –> Salt + Water + Carbon dioxide

22
Q

Hydrochloric acid + Sodium carbonate –>

A

Sodium chloride + Water + Carbon dioxide

23
Q

Sulfuric acid + Calcium carbonate –>

A

Calcium sulfate + Water + Carbon dioxide

24
Q

Describe the method to make copper sulfate crystals from copper(III) oxide and sulfuric acid?

A
  • Add copper oxide to sulfuric acid, stir
  • Warm over bunsen burner (don’t boil)
  • Solution turns blue, Copper sulfate formed
  • Black excess copper oxide will be seen, filter this out
  • Boil water on bunsen burner with copper sulfate solution dish on top
  • Stop heating when crystals appear
  • Let water evaporate, big crystals will form
  • Let solution cool + dry
  • Dab with tissue solution of crystals
  • (Crystallisation)
25
Q

Why is making copper sulfate crystals from copper(III) oxide and sulfuric acid so special (not really)?

A