Acids, Bases And pH Flashcards

1
Q

Bronsted Lowry acids

A

Proton donors

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2
Q

Bronsted Lowry bases

A

Proton acceptors

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3
Q

What does it means when acids and bases both dissociate in water

A

They break up into positively and negatively charged ions

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4
Q

Does a strong acids completely or partially dissociate in water

A

Completely

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5
Q

Do strong bases completely or slightly ionise in water

A

Completely

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6
Q

What is the ionic product of water

A

Kw= [H+][OH-]

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7
Q

Why is there no [H2O] in Kw

A

As water only dissociates a tiny amount, so the equilibrium lies well over to the left of (H2O H+ + OH-)
There’s so much water compared to the amounts of H+ and OH- ions that the concentration of water is considered to have a constant value.

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8
Q

Calculating pH

A

-log[H+]

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9
Q

[H+] = ?

A

10^-pH

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10
Q

Steps to find pH of a strong base

A

1) find the values of Kw and [OH-]
2) rearrange the equation to find [H+]
3) pH = -log[H+]

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11
Q

What is the acid dissociation constant

A

Ka= [H+][A-]
———-
[HA]

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12
Q

Steps to find the pH of weak acids

A

1) write an equation for Ka
2) rearrange the equation and substitute the values you know to find [H+]^2
3) take the root of both sides
4) -log[H+] = pH

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13
Q

Finding the concentration of weak acids

A

1) substitute the pH into the inverse pH equation to calculate [H+]
2) write an expression for Ka
3) rearrange the equation to give the concentration of the acid
4) substitute the values for Ka and [H+] into the equation and solve it

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14
Q

pKa = ?

A

-log(Ka)

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15
Q

Ka = ?

A

10^-pKa

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16
Q

Approx colour change pH for methyl orange

A

3.1 - 4.4
Colour at low pH - red
Colour at high pH - yellow

17
Q

Approx pH colour change for phenolphthalein

A

8.3-10
Colour at low pH - colourless
Colour at high pH - pink

18
Q

How do you make titration results as accurate as possible:

A
  • measure the neutralisation volume as precisely as you possibly can
  • it’s a good idea to repeat the titration until you get concordant results
  • use the 2 concordant results to calculate the mean titre
19
Q

Calculating concentrations of monoprotic acids

A

1) write out a balanced equation for the titration reaction
2) decide what you know already and what you need to know
3) calculate the number of moles of the reagent where you know the concentration and volume
4) use the molar ratios in the balanced equation to find out how many moles of the other reagent reacted
5) concentration = moles X 1000
—————-
Volume in cm^3

20
Q

What is a buffer

A

A solution that resists changes in pH when small amounts of acid or alkali are added

21
Q

Acidic buffers have a pH of a less than ?

A

7

22
Q

Basic buffers have a pH greater than ?

A

7