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HAVE A GREAT BREAK! REMINDER: NO LAB Announcements

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Announcements. HAVE A GREAT BREAK! REMINDER: NO LAB. Types of Chemical Reactions. Chapter 4 Goals: To be able to predict chemical reactivity. To know how to synthesize specific compounds. Types of Reactions. Acid-Base Oxidation-Reduction Precipitation Gas Forming Organic: Substitution - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Announcements

•HAVE A GREAT BREAK!

•REMINDER: NO LAB

Announcements

Page 2: Announcements

Types of Chemical Reactions

Chapter 4 Goals:To be able to predict chemical reactivity.To know how to synthesize specific

compounds.

Page 3: Announcements

Types of Reactions

Acid-BaseOxidation-ReductionPrecipitationGas FormingOrganic:

Substitution Addition Elimination

Page 4: Announcements

Reactions in Aqueous Solution

Aqueous- solvent is water

Reactions we’ll discuss today/next week are in aqueous solution, unless otherwise noted Acid-Base Redox Precipitation

NaCl(aq)

Page 5: Announcements

Electrolytes

Strong: All of the solute comes apart to yield ions in solution

Dissolution of KMnO4

Weak: Some of the solute comes apart to yield ions

Nonelectrolytes: No ions formed

Let’s compare

NaCl Na Cl

CH3CH2OH

CH3CO2H CH3CO2 H

Page 6: Announcements

Electrolytes in the Human Body

Most important:Na+, Cl-, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+ ,HCO3

-, and PO43-, SO4

2-

Elevated K+ cardiac arrythmia

Decreased extracellular K+ paralysis

Excess extracellular Na+ fluid retention

Decreased plasma Ca2+ and Mg2+ muscle spasms

Page 7: Announcements

Acids and Bases

Theories- there’s lots of themOnes we’ll use in this course

Lewis (later) Brønsted-Lowry (now)

An acid is a substance that donates a proton (H+) to a base

The hydronium ion

Page 8: Announcements

Brønsted-Lowry Definitions

Acid= donates a proton (H+) to a baseBase= accepts a proton (H+) from an acidAcid base reactions are reversible (almost

always)

Page 9: Announcements

Brønsted-Lowry Definitions

Acid= donates a proton (H+) to a baseBase= accepts a proton (H+) from an acidAcid base reactions are reversible (almost

always)

Page 10: Announcements

Important Acids and Bases

Page 11: Announcements

Strong Acids

100% of acid molecules produce ions in water Dissociation vs. ionization

HCl(aq)H2O(l) H3O(aq)Cl (aq)

Page 12: Announcements

Weak Acids

Only a few acid molecules produce ions (≤5%)

Strong vs. Weak acid ionization

Page 13: Announcements

Polyprotic Acids

Polyprotic acids can donate more than one H+

Sulfuric acid

Citric acid (C6H8O7) : Not all H’s are acidic

H2SO4 H+ + HSO4-

HSO4- H+ + SO4

2-

Page 14: Announcements

Bases

Strong bases are hydroxide salts

For now, the only important weak base is NH3.

Page 15: Announcements

If H3PO4 reacts as an acid, which of the following can it not make?

1. H4PO4+

2. H2PO4-

3. HPO42-

4. PO43-

Page 16: Announcements

If C2O42- (oxalate ion) reacts in an acid-base reaction, which of

the following can it not make?

1 2 3

33% 33%33%1. H2C2O4

2. HC2O4-

3. 2 CO2

20

Page 17: Announcements

Acid Base Reactions

Page 18: Announcements

Acid Base Reactions

Strong Acid + Strong Base

HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) NaCl(aq) + H2O(l) acid base “salt” water

What do we get if we mix:

HBr + LiOH

Page 19: Announcements

Acid Base Reactions

Diprotic acids or bases

H2SO4(aq) + NaOH(aq)

H2SO4(aq) + Ba(OH)2(aq)

HCl(aq) + Ba(OH)2(aq)

Page 20: Announcements
Page 21: Announcements

Acid-Base Reactions

Diprotic Acids or Bases

H2SO4(aq) + NaOH(aq)

H2SO4(aq) + Ba(OH)2(aq)

HCl(aq) + Ba(OH)2(aq)

Page 22: Announcements

Acid-Base Reactions

Strong Acid + Weak Base

HCl(aq) + NH3(aq) NH4Cl(aq)

Page 23: Announcements

Acid-Base Reactions

Weak Acid + Strong Base

HCN(aq) + NaOH(aq) NaCN(aq) + H2O(l) acid base “salt” water

Page 24: Announcements

Net Ionic Equations

HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) NaCl(aq) + H2O(l)

What really happens:

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

Sodium ion and chloride ion are “spectator ions”

Page 25: Announcements

Reactions involving weak bases

HCl(aq) + NH3(aq) NH4+(aq) + Cl-(aq)

Net-Ionic Equation:

NH3(aq) + H+(aq) NH4+(aq)

Page 26: Announcements

CH3CO2H(aq) + NaOH(aq)

1. CH3CO2H2+(aq) + NaO(aq)

2. CH3CO2-(aq) + H2O(l) + Na+(aq)

3. CH4(g) + CO2(g) + H2O(l)

Page 27: Announcements

HCN(aq) + NH3(aq)

1. NH4+(aq) + CN-(aq)

2. H2CN+(aq) + NH2-(aq)

3. C2N2(s) + 3 H2(g)

Page 28: Announcements

Solution Concentration: Molarity

Molarity = moles solute per liter of solution

0.30 mol NH3 dissolved in 0.500 L

Concentration = Written like: [NH3] = 0.60 M

Page 29: Announcements

pH ScaleIn pure water, a few

molecules ionize to form H3O+ and OH–

H2O + H2O OH– + H3O+

In acidic and basic solutions, these concentrations are not equalacidic: [H3O+] > [OH–]basic: [OH–] > [H3O+]neutral: [H3O+] = [OH–]

Page 30: Announcements

pH ScaleMeasure how much H3O+ is

in a solution using pHpH < 7.0 = acidicpH > 7.0 = basicpH = 7.0 = neutralMeasure of H3O+ and OH–

concentration (moles per liter) in a solution

As acidity increases, pH decreases

Page 31: Announcements

pH ScaleThe pH scale is logarithmic:The pH scale is logarithmic:

100100 101022 log(10log(1022) = 2) = 21010 101011 log(10log(1011) = 1) = 111 101000 log(10log(1000) = 0) = 00.10.1 1010–1–1 log(10log(10–1–1) = –1) = –10.010.01 1010–2–2 log(10log(10–2–2) = –2) = –2

pHpH = –log [H= –log [H33OO++]]

pH if [HpH if [H33OO++] = 10] = 10–5–5? 10? 10–9–9? ?

Acidic or basic?Acidic or basic?

pH if [HpH if [H33OO++] = 0.000057 M?] = 0.000057 M?

Page 32: Announcements

Finding [H[H33OO++] from pH] from pH

[H[H33OO++] = 10] = 10-pH-pH

What is [HWhat is [H33OO++] if pH = 8.9?] if pH = 8.9?

Page 33: Announcements

pH: Quantitative Measure of Acidity

Acidity is related to concentration of H+ (or H3O+)

pH = -log[H3O+]