ES - Hydrogen halides Flashcards

1
Q

What is a hydrogen halide?

A

A halogen + hydrogen.

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2
Q

How many electrons do all the halogens have in their outer shells?

A

7

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3
Q

How many electrons does hydrogen have in its outer shell?

A

1

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4
Q

How can hydrogen halides be made?

A

Using ionic halides.

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5
Q

How can hydrogen halides be made by using ionic halides?

A

By adding a concentrated acid, to a solid, ionic halide.

Usually phosphoric acid.

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6
Q

Why can’t you always use sulfuric acid to make hydrogen halides?

A

As it is an oxidising agent so it can get involved in redox reactions.

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7
Q

Why can’t sulfuric acid be used to make hydrogen bromide or hydrogen iodide?

A

When sodium bromide or sodium iodide for example, react with sulfuric acid, the bromide/iodide ions are oxidised to make bromine/iodine gas because bromine and iodine are strong enough reducing agents to reduce sulfuric acid.

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8
Q

When are hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen chloride stable?

A

When heated.

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9
Q

When heated, hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen chloride are stable, what does this mean?

A

They won’t split up into hydrogen and halide ions.

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10
Q

When heated, what happens to hydrogen bromide and hydrogen iodide?

A

They’ll split - hydrogen bromide slightly and hydrogen iodide more so.

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11
Q

When heated, why do hydrogen bromide and hydrogen iodide split?

A

Because of the strength of the hydrogen-halide bonds being weaker.

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12
Q

What happens to the strength of the hydrogen-halide bonds as you go down group 7?

A

They get weaker.

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13
Q

Why do the hydrogen-halide bonds get weaker down group 7?

A

Because the halogen atoms get bigger down the group, meaning the bonding electrons are further away from the nucleus and shielded by more inner electron shells.

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14
Q

Are hydrogen halides acidic or alkali?

A

Acidic.

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15
Q

Hydrogen chloride, hydrogen bromide and hydrogen iodide all dissolve in water to form what?

A

Strong acids.

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16
Q

What happens when a hydrogen halide dissolves in water?

A

It dissociates - the molecule splits apart to form 2 ions (a hydrogen ion and a halide ion).

17
Q

What ion from hydrogen halides makes the solutions acidic?

A

The hydrogen ions.

18
Q

What is an exception to the rule that hydrogen halides dissociate in water?

A

Hydrogen fluoride doesn’t fully dissociate in water (only a few molecules split apart) - still acidic but a weak acid.

19
Q

What do all hydrogen halides react with?

A

Ammonia.

20
Q

Why do hydrogen halides react with ammonia?

A

Ammonia is a base so can accept a proton to form the positively charged ammonium ion.

The ammonium ion can bond with a negative halide ion to produce an ammonium halide.

21
Q

Why don’t all hydrogen halides react with sulfuric acid?

A

Hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen chlorine don’t react as they’re not strong enough reducing agents to reduce the sulfur.

22
Q

Do all hydrogen halides react with ammonia?

A

Yes

23
Q

Do all hydrogen halides react with sulfuric acid?

A

No