Chapter 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Arrhenius Acid

A

substances that produce H3O+ ions in aqueous solution

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2
Q

Arrhenius bases

A

a substance that produces OH- in aqueous solutions

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3
Q

Bronsted-Lowry Acid

A

proton donor

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4
Q

Bronsted-Lowry Base

A

proton acceptor

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5
Q

strength of acid/base

A

determined by how much of each component is present in a reaction; expressed by an equilibrium constant (Keq)
-logKa = pKa

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6
Q

pKa

A

=-logKa
more negative the pKa, the stronger the acid
least negative pKa = strong base

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7
Q

Acid/Base Equilibrium

A
  • equilibrium favors reaction of the stronger acid and stronger base to give weaker acid and weaker base
  • equilibrium constant (Keq) is used to tell us if an acid/base reaction favors product formation (Keq>1) or not (Keq<1), or if both reactant and product are equal (Keq=1)
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8
Q

how to calculate Keq

A
  1. determine pKa values for the acid reactant and conjugate acid product
  2. take the difference in pKa (reactant-product)
  3. take the antilog of -pKeq (Keq=10^-pKeq)
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9
Q

reaction mechanism

A

a step-by-step description of how a chemical reaction occurs (narrow pushing)
-for acid/base reactions this deals with the transfer of a proton from an acid to a base

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10
Q

thermochemistry

A

study of the energy of chemical structures
-in reality, these acid/base reactions occur when they come into contact with one another, which then leads to a transition state, or an activated complex that is the highest energy point during the reaction

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11
Q

reaction coordinate diagrams

A

used to graphically represent changes in energy during a chemical reaction (energy vs reactions)

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12
Q

structure to acidity relationship

A
  • the key point to consider when determining relative acidities for neutral organic acids is the stability of the conjugate base anion (A-) that comes from the loss of a proton
  • the more stable the anion (A-) the greater the acidity of the acid HA
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13
Q

ways to stabilize A-

A
  1. electronegativity (negative charge on more EN atom)
  2. polarizability (negative charge on larger atom, spreading out e-)
  3. resonance (delocalization of the negative charge)
  4. inductive effect (spreading the negative charge onto an EWG)
  5. hybridization (negative charge in orbital w/ more s character)
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14
Q

lewis acid

A

molecule or ion that can form a new covalent bond by accepting a pair of electrons

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15
Q

Lewis base

A

molecule or ion that can form a new covalent bond by donating a pair of electrons

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16
Q

electron density

A

high electron density regions on molecules or ion react with low electron density regions of other molecules or ions, resulting a new covalent bond

17
Q

nucleophiles

A

e- rich species love nuclei

18
Q

electrophiles

A

e- poor species (electron loving)