Chapter 20 Flashcards

(31 cards)

1
Q

bronsted-lowry acid

A

proton donor

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2
Q

bronsted lowry base

A

proton acceptor

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3
Q

in bronsted-lowry base-acid reactions, the substance with the bigger Ka will act as

A

the acid

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4
Q

acid + metal ->

A

salt + hydrogen

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5
Q

acid + alkali ->

A

salt + water

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6
Q

acid + carbonate ->

A

salt + co2+ h2o

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7
Q

pH =

A
  • log [H+]
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8
Q

[H+] is the

A

concentration of hydrogen ions in the solution

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9
Q

Strong acids

A

completely dissociate

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10
Q

[HA]= the concentration of the acid is the same as

A

[H+] in a monobasic strong acid

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11
Q

ph values always given to

A

2.d.p

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12
Q

[H+]

A

1 x 10-pH

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13
Q

In all aqueous solutions and pure water the following equilibrium occurs:

A

H2O (l) H+(aq) + OH-

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14
Q

Kw =

A

[H+(aq) ][OH-(aq) ]

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15
Q

at room temp, kw =

A

1 x 10 ^-14

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16
Q

[OH-] =

17
Q

water ionises very slightly so can act as both

A

acid and a base

18
Q

how is a strong base calculated

A

from concentration of base and ionic product of water

19
Q

types of basic acids worked out by

A

no of hydrogen ions in the acid that can be replaced per molecule by metal ions or ammonium to form a SALT

20
Q

conjugate acid-base pair

A

contains two species that can be interconverted by transfer of a proton

21
Q

ph=

A

concentration of H+ ions in solution

22
Q

base 10 logarithmic scale of ph means one unit ph change-

A

10x change in hydrogen concentration

23
Q

smaller ph value=

A

larger h+ ion concentration

24
Q

in weak acids [H+]=

25
in weak acid the [HA] at equilibrium=
[HA] at the start, the dissociation is negligible
26
approximation of weak acid ph Ka=
[H+]^2/[HA]start
27
for a weak monobasic acid [H+]=
square root of Ka x [HA]start
28
weak acid
partially dissociates when dissolved in water
29
pKa
= -log Ka
30
ph of strong diluted acid [H+]=
[H+] old x old volume/new volume
31
ph of strong diluted base [OH-]=
[OH-] old x old volume/new volume