equilibrium amounts
ions present at any given time in an equilibrium
=> e.g. H3O+: as soon as it forms, it reacts back to water, so only very small amounts of the ions are present at any given time
How much H3O+ is in neutral water
pH = - log cH3O+
=> neutral = pH = 7
cH3O+ = 10^-7 = c OH-
Water Autoionization
2 H2O => H3O+ + OH-
=> Kw = ion-product constant for water
K+ = cH+ * cOH- = 10^-14
=> if concentration of one goes up, the other goes down
Acids
Abilities
substance that releases hydrogen ions, H+, in aqueous solution
Acids cause an increase in H3O+ concentration
hydrogen has no electron => called proton
sour taste, corrosive (strong acids), color litmus paper red
Hydronium-ion
H+ ions are much too reactive to exist alone => attach to water molecules to form H3O+
Bases
produces hydroxide ions (OH-) in aqueous solutions
Bitter taste, slippery feel when dissolved in water, turn red litmus paper blue
Strong Acids and Bases
Strong = how much the acid/ base dissociates into ions in water on its own
dissolve completely in water to release protons or hydroxide ions
E.g.
Strong acids: HCl (hydrochloride acid), HBr, HI, HF, HNO3 (nitric acid), H2SO4 (sulfuric acid), H2SO3 (sulphurous acid), H2PO4 (phosphoric acid)
Strong bases:
LiOH, NaOH, KOH, CsOH, RbOH, Ca(OH)2, Ba(OH)2
Weak Acids and Bases
cause only a small amount of H3O+ or OH- increase in the aqueous solution
=> only dissociate to a small extent
weak bases react with water by taking an H+ and releasing OH- but only to a small extent
Base: NH3 / NH4OH; Mg(OH)2, Al(OH)3, CaCO3
Acid: CH3COOH/ CH3COO-
Neutralization reaction
hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions form molecules of water
HCl + NaOH => NaCl + H2O
other product is salt (ionic compound)
occurs when there are enough moles of acid to react with all moles of base
if there is an excess of moles of acid, the resulting solution will be acidic
if there is an excess of moles of base, the resulting solution will be basic
spectator ions
ions that appear unchanged on both side of the reaction
important to consider when writing net ionic reactions from ionic ones
pH scale
since pH is a log scale based on 10, a pH change of 1 unite represents a power of 10 change in H+
solution with pH 2 has a cH+ ten times that of a solution with pH of 3
pH + pOH = 14
Environmental Consequences of Acids and Bases
Acid rain: subsequent process from air pollution
Acid or Base spills: transport of chemicals or release of chemicals from industry
Ocean Acidification: Result of increasing amounts of CO2 in the atomsphere
Ocean Acidification from CO2
CO2 (weak acid) can react with H2O and form H2Co3.
H2CO3 breaks apart into H+ and HCO3-
H+ will react with shells (out of CaCO3) and forms HCO3-
problems: H+ lowers the pH and CO32- is used from the shells and leads to a decrease of seashells and limestone
H+ reacts with carbonate ion in seawater to form bicarbonate (HCO3-) which reduces the concentration of carbonate ion in seawater. The calciumcarbonate in the shells of sea creatures begins to dissolve to maintain the concentration of carbonate ions in seawater:
CaCO3 => Ca2+ + CO32-
Acid Rain
most responsible:
SO2 and SO3 => combine with water to make H2SO4 (sulfuric acid) or H2SO3 (sulfurous acid)
SO2 + H2O => H2SO3 => 2H+ + SO3 2-
Nitrogen oxides (NO2 and NO3) that form HNO3 (nitric acid) with water
4 NO2 + 2 H2O + O2 => 4 HNO3 => H+ + NO3-
Acid rain
reacts with metals
reacts with limestones/ marble (CaCO3) to dissolve - such as statues and buildings)
Acidification of lakes and streams: Acid can come from snow melts which contains SO42- anions. Effects fish, frogs, plankton, other species
Forms aerosol haze above cities: Accelerated by sunlight, can cause/ aggravate respiratory illness
How does Sulfur/ Nitrogen get into the atmosphere
burning of coal (1-3% of it is sulfur)
S + O2 => SO2
So2 in the air can react with oxygen:
SO2 + 1/2 O2 => SO3
Nitrogen: NOx emissions are found in areas with heavy automobile traffic. Nitrogen dioxide gas in the atmosphere reacts with the hydroxyl radical to form nitric acid: NO2 + OH* => HNO3
Base spills in BC
teck smelter spills
chemical spills of salts, metals, and other materials into waterways can also result in change of pH in these aqueous environments
Nitrogen cycle
plants need nitrogen in a chemical form that reacts more easily, such as the ammonium ion, ammonia, or the nitrate ion, in order to grow
1. Nitrogen fixation via bacteria: N2 => NH3 => NH4+ (w/H2O)
2. Nitrification (via bacteria): NH4+ => NO2- => NO3-
3. Denitrification (via bacteria): NO3- => NO => N2O => N2
energy is released
Plants such as alfalfa, beans and peas remove N2 from the atmosphere, via bacteria living on or near the roots of the plants
Haber-Bosch Process
Bacteria do not provide enough reactive nitrogen to supply the world with food, so synthetic fertilizers must be added:
N2 + H2 => 2NH3
but needs very high temperatures and high pressure
process uses 1-2% of total world energy production per year. This is more energy then generated by all the world solar panels per year (2016 1.3%)
Last changed2 years ago