Buffers and neutralisation Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the pH titration curve of a weak acid and strong base.

A
  • Weak curve at the bottom indicates weak acid

- Strong spike at the point of neutralisation indicates strong acid

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2
Q

How is an indicator chosen using a pH titration curve?

A

Indicator is chosen at the point where the vertical section (sharp rise) overlap with its pH range.

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3
Q

Describe the pH titration curve.

A

The bottom represents the presence of excess acid when the base is firstly added- therefore pH is low.

Vertical section:
sharp rise in pH on addition of a small volume of base. The middle of this section is the ‘equivalence point’. This is the exact point of neutralisation (where the volume of the solution reacts exactly with another).

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4
Q

What is a buffer and how does it work? (7)

A

A buffer minimises the change in pH on the addition of small amounts of H+ or OH- ions.

It is made from a weak acid and its conjugate base.

The weak acid dissociates into its equilibrium:
HA ~ H+ + A-

On addition of H+ ions, it reacts with A- :
H+ + A- = HA
This shifts the equilibrium to the left in order to minimise increase of H+

On addition of OH-, it reacts with H+:
OH- + H+=H2O
This removes H+, therefore shifting equilibrium to the right in order to overcome loss of H+.

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5
Q

Describe the system that acts as a buffer in the body. (3)

A

Dissociation of H2CO3 in the blood forms an equilibrium:
H2CO3~ H+ + HCO3-

On addition of H+, it reacts with HCO3-, which shifts equilibrium to the left, to minimise rise in H+.

On addition of OH-, it reacts with H+ in a neutralisation reaction, which shifts the equilibrium to the right.
H+ + OH-= H2O

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6
Q

Explain how an indicator changes colour. (5)

A

Indicators are weak acids, therefore they dissociate to form an equilibrium.

The dissociated form has a different colour compared to the undissociated form.

Hln (colourless) ~ H+ + Ln- (red)

On addition of H+ ions, the solution will shift to the right, therefore turning colourless.
On addition of OH- ions, equilibrium shifts to the right, therefore causing a colour change to red.

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