Acidic and Basic Properties of Salts
Salts that dissolve and form neutral solutions
Strong acid with water:
Product is a weak base: no effect on pH
Strong base with water
Product is a weak acid: no effect on pH
Salts that dissolve and form basic solutions
Weak base with water:
Conjugate acid is strong acid: pH is less than 7
Salts of weak bases and strong acids dissolve in water and form acidic solutions
Salts of weak bases and weak acids
Weak acid with water
The conjugate base is the strong base: pH more than 7
Salts of strong bases and weak acid dissolve in water and form basic solutions
Salts of weak bases and weak acids
If Kb > Ka solution is acidic
If Kb > Ka solution is basic
equivalence point in the titration occurs when just enough acid and base have been mixed for a complete reaction to occur
no excess of either reactant
The point in a titration at which an indicator changes color is called the end-point
Change is favored when ∆G is negative
Salt dissolving increases the entropy of the system
The solubility product constant, Ksp: equilibrium between solid and respective ions in solutions
Ksp = [A+]a [B−]b
Constant at a given temperature
Common-ion effect applies to buffer
Use Ka instead of Ksp
Ion product, Qsp: an expression that is identical to the solubility product constant, but its value is calculated using concentrations that are not necessarily those at equilibrium If Qsp < Ksp: product of the concentration of the ions is smaller than it is at equilibrium Systema process in which ions are selectively precipitated from solution, leaving other ions attains equilibrium by moving to the right favoring dissociation More dissolve can dissolve If Qsp = Ksp: the system is at equilibrium more solid solve No precipitate forms If Qsp > Ksp: product of the concentration of ions is greater than it would be in equilibrium System attains equilibrium by moving to the left favoring precipitation precipitates forms until equilibrium is reached
Analytical Applications of Precipitate Reactions: Used to find ions ignoring other ions present
Qualitative analysis: branch of analytical chemistry that involves identifying elements, compounds, and ions in samples of unknown or uncertain composition
Spectrophotometers
Quantitative analysis: analytical chemists determine how much of a compound, element, or ion is in a sample