New Combined (Add Thermodynamics after completion)

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319 Terms

1
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How can we find the equivalence point on a titration curve?

The middle of the middle curve

2
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What is the half equivalence point?

A weak acid and its conjugate base are equal at half the volume used to achieve the equivalence point (pH = pKa)

3
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What are the strong acids to remember?

HCI, HBr, HI, HCIO4, H2SO4, HNO3

4
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What is Ka/pKa?

The equilibrium of an acid. Pka is the -log of that

5
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What occurs at the half equivalence point?

pH = pKa

6
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pH = pKa + -log (A)/(HA)

Henderson-Hasselbach

7
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What are the strong bases?

Mostly Group 1 and 2 metal hydroxides

8
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How are pOH/pH correlated to OH/H?

Inversely

9
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How can we find pOH or pH?

14 = pOH + pH

10
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What is pOH/pH?

-log (OH) / -log (H)

11
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How can we use pOH/pH to find H/OH?

They are equal to 10 to the power of the negative pOH/pH

12
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What is LeChatelier’s principle?

If stress is put on an equilibrium equation, it will act to balance it out that stress.

13
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If K is greater than 1, what does this mean?

Products are favored, and vice versa.

14
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What do we never use in K?

Solids, nor aqueous solutions if not Keq.

15
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What goes on top of K?

Products. Reactants on the bottom. Remember exponents!

16
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What is Hess’s law?

Energy change will be the same if a reaction happens in one or multiple steps.

17
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What are we trying to do when using Hess’s law for calculations?

To cancel out what we don’t want from a mixture of reactions.

18
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How do we cancel out in Hess’s law?

We arrange an element on the products and reactants, and they subtract from each other. Remember that this may be necessary if you have too much of something in the final equation, in which case 2 H - 1.5 H = .5 H

19
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What is molar solubility?

It’s molarity of a substance at equilibrium, and not the same as K.

20
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Common ion effect

The solubility of an IONIC compound is decreased by the presence of a common ion (an ion that is also present!! in the compound).

21
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ΔH and Endo/Exothermic

Positive is endo, negative is exo

22
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Endothermic

Takes in heat

23
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Exothermic

Releases heat

24
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What do the coefficients in equilibrium reactions tell us?

The coefficients in equilibrium reactions show stoichiometric ratios/consumption. For example, X can be greater than 2Y at equilibrium.

25
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How are H+ and OH- related?

Inversely.

26
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Hess rules for reversing and doubling

Reversing = 1/K Doubling = Squared

27
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What is NEVER part of equilibrium/chatelier?

Gases and liquids!

28
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How does a catalyst effect equilibrium?

It does not change anything, it only speeds up the reaction (reverse and forward).

29
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How do solids/liquids act in equilibrium?

Beyond being present at all, they don’t affect the equilibrium constant. Adding more does nothing!

30
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Can gases be used in Kc?

Yes, just divide their moles by the liters.

31
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How do we calculate molar solubility?

Get the x from the Ksp. ex: [Ag][CI] = x². If we take the square root of the Ksp we get it in this scenario.

32
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What do metals do in solution?

Something like I2 becomes I- to dissolve better

33
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What does saturated mean?

To be at equilibrium

34
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How do we solve common ion problems?

use a rice box to account for the additional ion

35
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How do we solve eq problems when the top is unknown and squared but we know the bottom?

Multiply bottom by Keq

36
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If you have the total pressure, how can Dalton’s law tell you partial PR?

The number of moles is proportional to pressure, so use that to estimate

37
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What do you NEVER need to use in Chemistry?

Quadratic equations

38
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What must you remember when squaring/rooting?

The x coefficient is squared or rooted too

39
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How do we solve common ion solubility problems?

Add the additional molarity to the concentration of the ion. Set M equal to Ksp. Get x!

40
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When is a solution acidic?

When H30 > OH-

41
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Hess law for multiplying coefficients by n

K^n (Times ½ is sq root of K as ex)

42
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What can we do to avoid quadratics?

Ignore x if its very small or square root both sides

43
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What do a strong acid and strong base make net ionic?

H30(aq) + OH(aq) → 2H20 (l)

44
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What do a weak acid and strong base make net ionic?

HA(aq) + OH(aq) → H20(l)

45
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What do a weak base and strong acid make net ionic?

B(aq) + H30(aq) → HB-(aq) + H20(l)

46
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What do a weak acid and weak base make net ionic?

B(aq) + H30 (aq) → HB(aq) + H20(l)

47
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How can we determine the strongest base/acid?

Equilibrium favors the side opposite to it

48
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What is a buffer solution?

A weak acid and its conjugate base which prevent precipitious changes in the pH (neutralizes H and/or OH)

49
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Effective buffer range

When the pH is less than -1 or +1 the pKa

50
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[HA] = [A]

pH = pKa

51
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[HA] > [A]

pH < pKa

52
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[HA] < [A]

pH > pKa

53
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How do we determine good indicators?

Their pKa should be near the pH at the equivalence point

54
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55
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What can we use to find Ka or Kb if we have the other?

ka * kb = kw

56
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A solution is only acidic if..

[H30] > [OH]

57
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What does high electronegativity do to a base/acid?

Base weaker b/c less proton acceptance (repels), acid stronger because more proton donation (repels)

58
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What does low electronegativity do to a base/acid?

Base stronger b/c more proton acceptance (attracts), acid weaker because less proton donation (attracts)

59
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Hydrochloric Acid (STRONG ACID)

HCl

60
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Hydrobromic Acid (STRONG ACID)

HBr

61
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Hyrdroiodic Acid (STRONG ACID)

HI

62
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Nitric Acid (STRONG ACID)

HNO₃

63
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Perchloric Acid (STRONG ACID)

HClO₄

64
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Sulfuric Acid (STRONG ACID)

H₂SO₄

65
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Group 1 AND 2 metal hydroxides are…

Strong bases

66
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2 groups around central atom

linear (180)

<p>linear (180)</p>
67
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3 groups around central atom

trigonal planar (120)

<p>trigonal planar (120)</p>
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4 groups around the central atom

tetrahedral (109.5)

<p>tetrahedral (109.5)</p>
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5 groups around central atom

trigonal bipyramidal (90, 120)

<p>trigonal bipyramidal (90, 120)</p>
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6 groups around central atom

octahedral (90)

<p>octahedral (90)</p>
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3 electron groups- 1 is lone pair

Trigonal planar, Bent (less than 120)

<p>Trigonal planar, Bent (less than 120)</p>
72
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4 groups- 1 is a lone pair

tetrahedral, Trigonal Pyramidal (107)

<p>tetrahedral, Trigonal Pyramidal (107)</p>
73
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4 groups- 2 groups are lone pairs

Tetrahedral, bent (105)

<p>Tetrahedral, bent (105)</p>
74
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5 groups- 1 is a lone pair

Trigonal bipyramidal, Seesaw (101.5, 173.1)

<p>Trigonal bipyramidal, Seesaw (101.5, 173.1)</p>
75
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5 groups- 2 groups are lone pairs

Trigonal bipyramidal, T-shaped

<p>Trigonal bipyramidal, T-shaped</p>
76
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5 groups- 3 groups are lone pairs

Trigonal bipyramidal, Linear

<p>Trigonal bipyramidal, Linear</p>
77
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6 groups- 1 group is a lone pair

Octahedral, Square Pyramidal

<p>Octahedral, Square Pyramidal</p>
78
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6 groups- 2 groups are lone pairs

Octahedral, Square planar

<p>Octahedral, Square planar</p>
79
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Linear

180

<p>180</p>
80
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Trigonal Planar

120

<p>120</p>
81
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Tetrahedral

109.5

<p>109.5</p>
82
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Trigonal Bipyramidal

90-120

<p>90-120</p>
83
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Octahedral

90

<p>90</p>
84
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How do you get to a net ionic equation?

Cross off parts that don’t change and simplify to empirical

85
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Strong acids #1

HCIO4, HCI, HBr,

86
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Strong acids #2

HI, HNO3, H2SO4,

87
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Strong bases #1

LiOH, NaOH, KOH,

88
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Strong bases #2

Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, Ba(OH)2,

89
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What do strong acids and bases do?

They disassociate into ions in a solution, the ones not in this deck likely do not

90
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How do you balance redox half-reactions?

Find the least common denominator of the electrons, multiply the reactions by that and add each side separately

91
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What is oxidation?

A loss of electrons

92
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What is reduction?

A gain of electrons

93
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Oxygen oxidation number

-2, unless in a peroxide — then -1

94
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Hydrogen oxidation number

H2 is 0, with a metal it is -1, with a nonmetal it is +1

95
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What is an element’s oxidation number when alone and without charge?

0

96
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What is charge?

Oxidation number

97
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What is Flourine’s oxidation number?

0 when alone, -1 in all others

98
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What is one good way to find oxidation numbers?

Look at the periodic trends — remember NOF, -3, -2, -1, (and before that, Period 1 is +1 and adds until N, skipping over transition)

99
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What should you do when stuck with two non-metals and little information?

Apply the negative charge to the more electronegative element

100
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What is pH?

A measure of acidity from 0-14.