Unit 8: Acids and Bases

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50 Terms

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Arrhenius acid

A substance that produces hydronium (H3O+) in water (often written as producing H+).

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Arrhenius base

A substance that produces hydroxide (OH−) in water.

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Brønsted–Lowry acid

A proton (H+) donor.

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Brønsted–Lowry base

A proton (H+) acceptor.

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Lewis acid

An electron-pair acceptor (broader than Brønsted–Lowry; may involve no protons).

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Lewis base

An electron-pair donor (e.g., NH3 donates a lone pair to accept a proton).

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Conjugate base

The species formed when an acid donates a proton (acid minus H+).

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Conjugate acid

The species formed when a base accepts a proton (base plus H+).

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Conjugate acid–base pair

Two species that differ by exactly one proton (H+).

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Amphiprotic species

A substance that can act as either an acid or a base depending on what it reacts with (e.g., H2O).

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Acid strength (Unit 8 meaning)

How completely an acid reacts with water (equilibrium position), not how concentrated it is.

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Strong acid

Reacts essentially completely with water to form H3O+; in calculations, [H3O+] is determined by stoichiometry.

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Weak acid

Only partially ionizes in water; requires equilibrium (Ka/ICE table) to find [H3O+].

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Strong base

Dissociates essentially completely in water to produce OH− (e.g., NaOH); [OH−] is determined by stoichiometry.

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Weak base

Partially reacts with water by accepting a proton, producing OH− (requires Kb/ICE table).

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Common strong acids (AP list)

HCl, HBr, HI, HNO3, HClO4, H2SO4 (first dissociation treated as strong).

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Common strong bases (AP list)

LiOH, NaOH, KOH, Ba(OH)2, Sr(OH)2.

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Autoionization of water

2H2O ⇌ H3O+ + OH− (pure water ionizes slightly).

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Kw (ion-product constant of water)

Kw = [H3O+][OH−] = 1.0×10−14 at 25°C; pKw = 14.00 at 25°C.

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pH

pH = −log[H3O+] (base-10 log; [H+] is shorthand for [H3O+]).

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pOH

pOH = −log[OH−] (base-10 log).

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Relationship between pH and pOH (25°C)

pH + pOH = 14.00 at 25°C (because pH + pOH = pKw).

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Ka (acid dissociation constant)

Equilibrium constant for acid ionization; larger Ka means stronger acid.

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Kb (base dissociation constant)

Equilibrium constant for base reacting with water to form OH−; larger Kb means stronger base.

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pKa

pKa = −log Ka (smaller pKa means stronger acid).

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pKb

pKb = −log Kb (smaller pKb means stronger base).

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Conjugate relationship: KaKb = Kw

For a conjugate acid–base pair, Ka(HA)·Kb(A−) = Kw; at 25°C, pKa + pKb = 14.00.

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ICE table

A setup (Initial, Change, Equilibrium) used to solve equilibrium concentrations for weak acids/bases.

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Weak-acid equilibrium (HA)

HA + H2O ⇌ H3O+ + A−; Ka = ([H3O+][A−])/[HA].

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Weak-base equilibrium (B)

B + H2O ⇌ BH+ + OH−; Kb = ([BH+][OH−])/[B].

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5% approximation check

If x/C × 100% < 5%, you may approximate C − x ≈ C in Ka or Kb ICE-table calculations; otherwise solve the quadratic.

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Percent ionization (percent dissociation)

% ionization = ([H3O+]eq / [HA]initial)×100%; for weak acids, it increases as the solution is diluted.

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Neutralization (net ionic)

H3O+ + OH− → 2H2O (key reaction when strong acid and strong base are mixed).

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Strong acid–strong base mixing workflow

Convert to moles → do neutralization stoichiometry → find excess acid/base → divide by total volume → convert to pH/pOH.

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Polyprotic acid

An acid that can donate more than one proton (e.g., H2SO4, H3PO4), typically dissociating stepwise.

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Stepwise dissociation constants (Ka1, Ka2, …)

Each proton loss has its own Ka; usually Ka1 > Ka2 > Ka3 because losing later protons is less favorable.

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Amphiprotic intermediate ion

An intermediate from a polyprotic acid (e.g., HA−) that can act as an acid or a base in water.

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Conjugate-base stability principle

Stronger acids have more stable conjugate bases; stability of the conjugate base drives acidity trends.

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Resonance stabilization (acidity)

Delocalization of negative charge in the conjugate base stabilizes it and increases acid strength (e.g., carboxylic acids > alcohols).

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Inductive effect (acidity)

Electron-withdrawing groups stabilize negative charge through sigma bonds, strengthening the acid (e.g., CF3COOH > CH3COOH).

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Down-group H–X acidity trend

For binary acids H–X down a group, acidity increases as X gets larger because H–X bonds weaken and negative charge is better stabilized (e.g., HI > HF).

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Oxyacid oxygen-number trend

With the same central atom, more oxygens usually means a stronger oxyacid (greater resonance/inductive stabilization of the conjugate base), e.g., HClO3 > HClO2 > HClO.

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Oxyacid central-atom electronegativity trend

With the same number of oxygens, a more electronegative central atom tends to make a stronger oxyacid (stabilizes the conjugate base via induction).

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Common ion effect (hydroxide solubility)

Adding OH− shifts M(OH)n(s) ⇌ Mn+ + nOH− left (less dissolves); adding H+ removes OH− as H2O, pulling dissolution right (more dissolves).

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Salt hydrolysis

Reaction of dissolved ions with water that makes a solution acidic or basic; conjugate acids of weak bases (e.g., NH4+) produce H3O+, and conjugate bases of weak acids (e.g., F−, C2H3O2−) produce OH−.

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Equivalence point vs endpoint

Equivalence point: stoichiometric point where moles acid and base react exactly; endpoint: indicator color change observed experimentally (should be close to equivalence).

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Acid–base indicator

A weak acid/base whose conjugate forms have different colors; color transition occurs near its pKa (often ~pKa ± 1), so choose an indicator whose transition range lies in the steep part of the titration curve.

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Buffer

A mixture (typically weak acid/conjugate base or weak base/conjugate acid) that resists pH change by consuming added H3O+ or OH− via conjugate reactions.

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Henderson–Hasselbalch equation

For a weak-acid buffer: pH = pKa + log([A−]/[HA]); after adding strong acid/base, do stoichiometry first, then apply this to the new ratio.

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Half-equivalence point

In a weak acid–strong base titration, the point where [HA] = [A−], so pH = pKa (lets you read pKa from the curve).

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