Acids and Bases Deck 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Define an acid

A

Proton Donor

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2
Q

Define a base

A

Proton Acceptor

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3
Q

Define a strong Acid

A

An acid (proton donor) which fully dissociates

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4
Q

Define a weak Acid

A

An acid ( proton donor) which only partially dissociates

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5
Q

Define pH

A

pH = -Log10[H+]

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6
Q

[H+] =

A

[H+] = 10-pH

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7
Q

Ionic Product of Water (Kw) =

A

Kw = [H+][OH-]

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8
Q

When calculating the pH of a strong acid use:

A

pH = -Log10[H+]

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9
Q

When calculating the pH of a strong base use:

A

Rearrange Kw = [H+][OH-] to get [OH-] then use pH = -Log10[H+]

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10
Q

When calculating the pH of a weak acid use:

A

Ka = [H+]2/[HA] and rearrange to get [H+]
then use pH = -Log10[H+]

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11
Q

Chemical equation for Hydrochloric Acid + Sodium

A

HCl(aq) + Na(s) –> NaCl(aq) + ½ H2(g)

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12
Q

Chemical equation for Nitric Acid + Potassium Oxide

A

2HNO3 (aq) + K2O(s) –> 2KNO3 (aq) + H2O(l)

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13
Q

Chemical equation for Phosphoric Acid + Sodium Hydroxide

A

H3PO4(aq) + 3NaOH(s) –> Na3PO4(aq (aq) + 3H2O(l)

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14
Q

Chemical equation for Hydrochloric Acid + Calcium Oxide

A

2HCl (aq) + CuO(s) –> CuCl2 (aq) + H2O(l)

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15
Q

Chemical equation for Sulfuric Acid + Sodium Carbonate

A

H2SO4(aq) + Na2CO3(s) –> Na2SO4(aq) + CO2(g) + H2O(l)

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16
Q

A difference of 1 on the pH scale means

A

a 10x difference in [H+]

17
Q

pKa =

18
Q

Ka =

19
Q

The value of Kw will alter with temperature, explain why pure water is always neutral

A

because [H+] = [-OH] at all times.

20
Q

Formula for sulphuric acid

21
Q

Formula for nitric acid

22
Q

Formula for phosphoric acid

23
Q

Formula for ethanoic acid

24
Q

Formula for aluminium phosphate

25
Formula for sodium ethanoate
CH3COONa
26
Formula for lead (II) nitrate
Pb(NO3)2
27
Formula for potassium sulphate
K2SO4
28
Formula for magnesium chloride
MgCl2
29
Explain how to chose a suitable indicator for a titration
A SUITABLE INDIATOR CHANGES COLOUR SOMEWHERE ON THE VERTICAL SECTION OF A pH TITRATION CURVE
30
What does the vertical section of a titration curve show?
This indicates what the average titre would be which can be used in a calculation. The midpoint of this vertical section is the equivalence point.