AP Chem Chapter 8

Acids and Bases Overview

  • Bronsted-Lowry Theory:

    • Acid: Proton donor

    • Base: Proton acceptor

  • Arrhenius Theory:

    • Acid: Produces H3O+ in water

    • Base: Produces OH- in water

  • Key Concepts:

    • Acid-base reactions occur in aqueous solutions.

    • Strong acids and bases fully ionize; weak acids and bases ionize partially.

  • Equilibrium Constants:

    • Kw (autoionization of water) = 1×10^-14 at 298K

    • pKw = 14 = pKa + pKb

  • Mixture Behaviors:

    • Strong Acid + Strong Base: pH from excess reagent.

    • Weak Acid + Strong Base: Buffer if weak acid excess; pH based on excess OH- if strong base excess.

    • Weak Base + Strong Acid: Buffer if weak base excess; pH from excess H3O+ if strong acid excess.

    • Weak Acid + Weak Base: Reaches equilibrium state.

  • Titrations:

    • Equivalence point: the number of moles of titrations added is equal to the number of moles of analyte present

    • Polyprotic Acid: An acid that donates multiple protons and has a dissociation that occurs in steps

    • pH is 5-6 if Methyl orange is used as an indicator

      • If it’s red its in an acid

      • If it’s in a base it’s yellow

    • pH is 6-7 if Methyl red is used as an indicator

      • If it’s red and it’s in an acid

      • If it’s yellow and it’s in a base

    • pH is 7-8 if Litmus is used as an indicator

      • If it’s red and it’s in an acid

      • If it’s blue and it’s in a base

    • pH is 9-10 if Phenolphthalein is used as an indicator

      • If it’s colorless its in an acid

      • If it’s pink and it’s in a base

    • An acid with more than one H+ will have multiple equivalence points and the titration curve will have multiple vertical points

  • Structure of Acids/Bases:

    • Strong acids have very weak conjugate bases and vice versa

    • Electronegative elements tend to stabilize the conjugate bases relative to the conjugate acid and increase the acid strength

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