Ch. 9: Polyprotic Acid-Base Equilibria

Similar documents
Strong acids and bases

Effect of acid rain on erosion of limestone/marble Calcite---CaCO 3(s) <------> Ca +2 + CO 3

Polyprotic acid-base equilibria

7-4 Systematic Treatment of Equilibrium

Ionic Equilibria. In the Brönsted Lowry classification, acids and bases may be anions such as HSO 4

Now, the excess strong base will react: HA + OH - A - + H 2 O Start mol End mol

Chem 222 #20 Ch 23, Ch26, Ch11 Mar 29, 2005

Acid Base Equilibria

Chemistry 222. Start mol End mol

Buffer Solutions. Buffer Solutions

CHAPTER 7 Acid Base Equilibria

Ch. 10: Acid-Base Titrations

Chem 222 #20 Ch 11 Nov 1, 2004

Acid-Base Equilibria (Chapter 10.) Problems: 2,3,6,13,16,18,21,30,31,33

Water. Water participates in H-bonding with biomolecules.

Acid and Base. Properties of Umass Boston

Acid-Base Equilibria. 1.NH 4 Cl 2.NaCl 3.KC 2 H 3 O 2 4.NaNO 2. Acid-Ionization Equilibria. Acid-Ionization Equilibria

Acids And Bases. H + (aq) + Cl (aq) ARRHENIUS THEORY

Chemical Equilibrium Review? Chemical Equilibrium

Chapter 17. Additional Aspects of Aqueous Equilibria. Lecture Presentation. James F. Kirby Quinnipiac University Hamden, CT

Volume NaOH Delivered (ml)

Advanced Placement Chemistry Chapters Syllabus

Department of Chemistry University of Texas at Austin

Acid-Base Equilibria. 1.NH 4 Cl 2.NaCl 3.KC 2 H 3 O 2 4.NaNO 2. Solutions of a Weak Acid or Base

Page 1 of 7 Chem 201 Lecture11 Summer 07. Admin: recall all Test #1 s Please turn in Test 1 for regrading. Last time:

Triprotic H3A, H2A -, HA 2-, A 3-

Chemistry 102 Summary July 24 th. Question: Sketch a generic curve for a diprotic acid titration with a strong base. Answer:

Chapter 15 - Acids and Bases Behavior of Weak Acids and Bases

Chapter 16 Aqueous Ionic Equilibrium Buffer Solutions

Chapter 16: Applications of Aqueous Equilibrium Part 2. Acid-Base Titrations

Course Notes Chapter 9, 11, 12. Charge balance All solutions must be electrically neutral!!!!!!!! Which means they carry a no net charge.

Principles of Reactivity: The Chemistry of Acids and Bases. Acids, Bases and Arrhenius

1. Know and be capable of applying the Bronsted-Lowery model of acids and bases (inculdig the concepts related to conjugate acid-base pairs.

Acids and Bases Written Response

Chemical Equilibrium. Many reactions are, i.e. they can occur in either direction. A + B AB or AB A + B

Equilibrium constant

Ch 15, Applications of Aq Equilibria

Chemical Equilibrium

Chem 1102 Semester 1, 2011 ACIDS AND BASES

5/10/2017. Chapter 10. Acids, Bases, and Salts

10.1 Acids and Bases in Aqueous Solution

a. Always start with the species added to water.

Chapter 16. Dr Ayman Nafady

Page 1 of 9 Chem 201 Lecture 6a Summer 09. Announcement: Fluoride experiment will replace the Cu-ASV experiment for those who have not yet done Cu-ASV

K w. Acids and bases 8/24/2009. Acids and Bases 9 / 03 / Ionization of water. Proton Jumping Large proton and hydroxide mobility

ADVANCED PLACEMENT CHEMISTRY ACIDS, BASES, AND AQUEOUS EQUILIBRIA

Chemistry 102 Chapter 17 COMMON ION EFFECT

15/04/2018 EQUILIBRIUM- GENERAL CONCEPTS

Chapter 16 Acids and Bases. Chapter 16 Acids and Bases

g. Looking at the equation, one can conclude that H 2 O has accepted a proton from HONH 3 HONH 3

Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Diprotic Acids Diprotic acids have two ionizable protons that undergo successive ionization.

Acid - Base Equilibria 3

Chapter 17. Additional Aspects of Aqueous Equilibria. Lecture Presentation. John D. Bookstaver St. Charles Community College Cottleville, MO

Chem 5 PAL Worksheet Acids and Bases Smith text Chapter 8

Chapter 17: Additional Aspects of Aqueous equilibria. Common-ion effect

Chem 222 #29 Review Apr 28, 2005

Chapter 15, Applications of Aqueous Equilibria

Dr. Diala Abu-Hassan, DDS, PhD Lecture 3 MD summer 2014

CHAPTER 9 SUPPLEMENTARY SOLUTIONS 22 MONOPROTIC ACID-BASE EQUILIBRIA ] + [ + H 3 NCH 2 CO 2 H] = 0.05 M

Chemical Equilibria Part 2

Chapter 3: Acid Base Equilibria. HCl + KOH KCl + H 2 O acid + base salt + water

Today. Solubility The easiest of all the equilibria. Polyprotic Acids determining something about an unknown by reacting it with a known solution

Chapter 6 Acids and Bases

Chapter 9: Acids, Bases, and Salts

Chem 1046 Lecture Notes Chapter 17

Chemistry 132 NT. Acid-Base Equilibria

Acid-Base Chemistry. Key Considerations

ACIDS AND BASES. Note: For most of the acid-base reactions, we will be using the Bronsted-Lowry definitions.

Chapter 16: Acid Base Equilibria Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria Learning Standards & Objectives;

Try this one Calculate the ph of a solution containing M nitrous acid (Ka = 4.5 E -4) and 0.10 M potassium nitrite.

Department of Chemistry University of Texas at Austin

IB Chemistry ABS Introduction An acid was initially considered a substance that would produce H + ions in water.

EXAM 2 CHEMISTRY 224 March 1, Use a #2 pencil to code all information on the answer sheet.

CHEM 109A Organic Chemistry

CHEM*2400/2480 Summer 2004 Assignment 7 ANSWERS

Where does Physical Chemistry fit into your course in Dentistry?

Chapter 16. Acid-Base Equilibria

Titration curve of amino acids. BCH 312 [Practical]

Chapter 17 Additional Aspects of

Chapter 17 Additional Aspects of

ph = log[h + ] pk a = logk a = 4.75 K a = HA H + + A K a = [H+ ][A ] [HA] Acid-Base Chemistry: Alpha Fractions, Titrations, Exact Solutions

CHM112 Lab Hydrolysis and Buffers Grading Rubric

Additional Aspects of Aqueous Equilibria David A. Katz Department of Chemistry Pima Community College

Chapter 17. Additional Aspects of Equilibrium

Chapter 14 Acid- Base Equilibria Study Guide

Acid Base Reactions. Reading: Ch 4 section 8 Homework: Chapter 4: 79, 81*, 83*, 108 (optional)

Chapter 17: Solubility Equilibria

Weak acids are only partially ionized in aqueous solution: mixture of ions and un-ionized acid in solution.

Acids and bases, ph and buffers. Dr. Mamoun Ahram Lecture 2

Chapter 8 Acid-Base Equilibria

CHEM Exam 4 April 21, For #1 - #4: Consider.the base, aniline (Anil), which has a base equilibrium constant, Kb = 4.3x10-10.

Chapter 9 Aqueous Solutions and Chemical Equilibria

Acid-Base Equilibria. And the beat goes on Buffer solutions Titrations

Titration of a Monoprotic Weak Acid with the Strong Base, NaOH

Chapter 15. Titration Curves for Complex Acid/Base Systems

Lecture 20 Chapter 17, Sections 4-5 More weak acids and bases. Identifying acids and bases Conjugate acids and bases Salts of weak acids and bases

Ocean Acidification the other CO2 problem..

HW #10: 10.38, 10.40, 10.46, 10.52, 10.58, 10.66, 10.68, 10.74, 10.78, 10.84, 10.88, 10.90, ,

Problem 1 C 6 H 5 [ COOH C 6 H[H 5 COO + ] - + H [ I C - x + x + x E x x x

Transcription:

Ch. 9: Polyprotic Acid-Base Equilibria Outline: 9-1 Diprotic Acids and Bases 9-2 Diprotic buffers 9-3 Polyprotic Acids and Bases 9-4 Which is the Principal Species? 9-5 Fraction Compositions 9-6 Isoelectric and Isoionic ph s Updated Oct. 24, 2011: new slides 1-24

Amino Acids Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins, and always have an acidic carboxylic acid group, a basic amino group, and a neutral substituent, R. At low ph: both the -COO and -NH2 groups are protonated At high ph: both the -COO and -NH2 groups are not protonated There are separate pka values associated with proton dissociation from all three of the functionalities (see table next page). AA s can also exist in zwitterionic form. Zwitterions are species carrying both positive and negative charges, which are stabilized, in the cases of AA s by interactions of the -COO - and -NH3 + groups with water. In fact, AA s in the solid state almost always have their most stable state as a zwitterion; however, in the gas phase, zwitterions rarely exist.

pka s of Amino Acids

Leucine Our discussion will focus upon Leucine (HL) (i.e., R is the isobutyl group, (CH3)2CHCH2 ) The associated equilibrium constants are: (note: sometimes the subscripts a are omitted on Ka1 and Ka2) Recall: relations between these coefficients involve Kw: K a1 ik b2 = K w K a2 ik b1 = K w We will examine three cases, where we calculate the ph s and compositions of separate solutions of (i) 0.0500 M H2L +, (ii) 0.0500 M HL and (iii) 0.0500 M L -. We note that they do not depend on the charge type of the acids and bases, meaning that we use the same procedure to find the ph of the diprotic H2A, where A is anything, or H2L +, where HL is leucine.

Leucine: Acidic form, H2L + Leucine hydrochloride contains the protonated species, H2L +, which can dissociate twice. Since K1 = 4.70 10 3, H2L + is a weak acid, and HL is an even weaker acid, with K2 = 1.80 10 10. We can make the approximation that a solution of H2L + behaves as a monoprotic acid, with Ka = K1 (since H2L + dissociates only partly, and HL much less). K a = K 1 = 4.70 10 3 x 2 F x = K a x = 1.32 10 2 M = [HL] = [H + ] [H + ] = x = 1.32 10 2 ph = 1.88 [H 2 L + ] = F x = 3.68 10 2 M For most diprotic acids, K1 is sufficiently larger than K2 for this approximation to be valid. Even if K2 were just 10 times less than K1, [H + ] calculated by ignoring the second ionization would be in error by only 4%. The error in ph would be only 0.01 ph unit. In summary, a solution of a diprotic acid behaves like a solution of a monoprotic acid, with Ka = K1. We have assumed that [L] is very small; nonetheless, we can still calculate it. K 2 = [H+ ][L ] [HL] [L ] = K 2 [HL] [H + ] = 1.80 10 10 M The approximation [H + ] [HL] reduces the equation above to [L ] = K2 (good approximation!)

Leucine: Basic form, L - The species L, found in a salt such as sodium leucinate, can be prepared by treating leucine (HL) with an equimolar quantity of NaOH. There are two basic species with Kb1 = 5.55 10 5 and Kb2 = 2.13 10 12. We can make the approximation that a solution of L - behaves as a monoprotic base, with Kb = Kb1 (L - does not really hydrolyze with H2O to give HL). [H2L + ] = Kb2 = 2.13 10 12 M, so the approximation that [H2L + ] is insignificant relative to [HL] is justified. In summary, if there is any reasonable separation between Ka1 and Ka2 (and, therefore, between Kb1 and Kb2), the fully basic form of a diprotic acid can be treated as monobasic, with Kb = Kb1.

CO2 in the air and ocean Dissolved carbon dioxide is one of the most important diprotic acids in Earth s ecosystem. Increasing atmospheric CO2 increases the concentration of CO2 dissolved in the ocean, which consumes carbonate and lowers the ph: The ph of the ocean has already decreased from its preindustrial value of 8.16 to 8.04 today, and is predicted to be 7.7 by 2100. Low [CO3 2- ] promotes dissolution of solid CaCO3: If CO3 2- in the ocean decreases enough, organisms such as plankton and coral with CaCO3 shells or skeletons will not survive. Calcium carbonate has two crystalline forms called calcite and aragonite (more soluble). When pteropods collected from the subarctic Pacific Ocean are kept in water that is less than saturated with aragonite, their shells begin to dissolve within 48 h. Animals such as the pteropod lie at the base of the food chain.

Leucine: Intermediate form, HL This is more complicated to treat, since HL may act as either an acid or a base. The HL is said to be amphiprotic (i.e., it can accept and/or donate a proton). However, we expect that this solution will be acidic, since Ka > Kb. But, we cannot simply ignore the hydrolysis reaction, even if there is a fairly large difference between Ka and Kb. Since the first reaction produces H +, it reacts with the OH - in the second reaction to form H2O, thereby driving this reaction to the right. Hence, we need to treat this problem with the systematic treatment of equilibrium. We have Step 1 listed above. Step 2 is the charge balance equation: There are a number of substitutions we can make to ultimately calculate the species concentrations and the ph (written example). Summary for all three forms:

Simplified calculation: Intermediate form Starting from the equation we worked out using the S.T.E., we can make a few more simplifications (i.e., (i) K2F >> Kw and (ii) K1 >> F): [H + ] = K 1K 2 F + K 1 K w K 1 + F K 1K 2 F K 1 + F K 1K 2 F F = K 1 K 2 Approx. (i) Approx. (ii) Then, reframe the equation in terms of ph: log[h + ] 1 2 (log K 1 + log K 2 ) Recall: log[h + ] 1 2 (log K 1 + log K 2 ) ph 1 2 (pk 1 + pk 2 ) This very powerful and useful equation can be used in many situations, and says that the ph of the intermediate form of a diprotic acid is close to midway between pk1 and pk2, regardless of the formal concentration.

Simplified calculation: Intermediate form, 2 Example:

Summary of diprotic acid calculations Solution of H2A Solution of HA - Solution of HA Treat H2A as a monoprotic acid with Ka = K1 to find [H + ], [HA ], and [H2A]. Treat HA - as a monoprotic base with Kb = Kb1 = Kw/Ka2 to find [H + ], [HA ], and [A 2- ]. Use the approximation [HA ] F and find the ph Use the K2 equilibrium to solve for [A2 ]. Use the K1 equilibrium to solve for [H2A]. With [H + ] from step 1 and [HA ] F, solve for [H2A] and [A 2 ], using the K1 and K2 equilibria. We must be careful, since we have not considered other equilibria (e.g., Na + or K + in solutions of HA or A 2 form weak ion pairs that we have neglected).

Diprotic Buffers A buffer made from a diprotic (or polyprotic) acid is treated in the same way as a buffer made from a monoprotic acid. For the acid H2A, we can write two Henderson-Hasselbalch equations, both of which are always true. If we happen to know [H2A] and [HA ], then we will use the pk1 equation. If we know [HA ] and [A 2 ], we will use the pk2 equation. ph = pk 1 + log [HA ] [H 2 A] ; ph = pk + log [A2 ] 2 [HA]

Polyprotic acids and bases The treatment of diprotic acids and bases can be extended to polyprotic systems. 1. H3A is treated as a monoprotic weak acid, with Ka = K1. 2. H2A - is treated as an intermediate form of a diprotic acid. 3. HA 2- treated as the intermediate form of a diprotic acid. However, HA 2 is surrounded by H2A and A 3, so the equilibrium constants to use are K2 and K3, instead of K1 and K2. [H + ] = K 1 K 2 F + K 1 K w K 1 + F [H + ] = K 2 K 3 F + K 2 K w K 2 + F 4. A 3 is treated as monobasic, with Kb = Kb1 = Kw/Ka3.

Example (written solution). Polyprotic acids and bases, 2 We have reduced acid-base problems to just three types. When you encounter an acid or base, decide whether you are dealing with an acidic, basic, or intermediate form. Then do the appropriate arithmetic to answer the question at hand.

Principal Species We sometimes must identify which species of acid, base, or intermediate predominates under given conditions. e.g., What is the principal form of benzoic acid at ph = 8? At ph = 4.20, there is a 1:1 mixture of benzoic acid (HA) and benzoate ion (A ). At ph = pka + 1 = 5.20, the quotient [A ]/[HA] is 10:1. At ph = pka + 2 = 6.20), the quotient [A ]/[HA] is 100:1. As ph increases, the quotient [A ]/[HA] increases further. Hence, for a monoprotic system: The basic species, A, is the predominant form when ph > pka. The acidic species, HA, is the predominant form when ph < pka. Thus, the predominant form of benzoic acid at ph 8 is the benzoate anion, C6H5CO2 -.

Principal Species, 2 For polyprotic systems, our reasoning is similar, but there are several values of pka. Consider oxalic acid, H2Ox, with pk1 = 1.25 and pk2 = 4.27: At ph = pk1, [H2Ox] = [HOx ]. At ph = pk2, [HOx ] = [Ox 2 ]. The chart shows the major species in each ph region. Hence, for a polyprotic system: The basic species, A 2-, is the predominant form when ph > pk2. The intermediate species, HA -, is the predominant form when pk1 < ph < pk2 The acidic species, H2A, is the predominant form when ph < pk1.

Principal Species, 3 What is the principal form of arginine at ph 10.0? Approximately what fraction is in this form? What is the second most abundant form at this ph? At ph = pk2 = 8.99, [H2Arg + ] = [HArg]. At ph = pk3 = 12.1 [HArg] = [Arg ]. At ph = 10.0, the major species is HArg. Since ph 10.0 is about one ph unit higher than pk2, we can say [HArg]/[H2Arg + ] 10:1. i.e., ca. 90% of arginine is in the form HArg. The second most important species is H2Arg +, which makes up ca. 10% of the arginine.

Fractional Compositions We now derive equations that give the fraction of each species of acid or base at a given ph. These equations are useful for acid-base and EDTA titrations, and electrochemical equilibria. Monoprotic systems Goal: Find an expression for the fraction of an acid in each form (HA and A ) as a function of ph. We can do this by combining the equilibrium constant with the mass balance: Rearranging the MB gives [A ] = F [HA], which is plugged into the Ka expression to give This can be rearranged to give the concentration of HA: The fraction of molecules in the form HA is called αha:

Fractional Compositions, 2 If we divide the previous equation by F, we get: α HA = [HA] F = [H + ] [H + ] + K a Fraction in the form HA α A = [A ] F = K a [H + ] + K a Fraction in the form A - Here we see plots of αha and αa- as a function of ph for a system with a pka of 5.00. At low ph, almost all of the acid is in the form HA. At high ph, almost everything is in the form A. Note, that: αha + αa- = 1. The fraction here denoted as αa- is the same as the fraction of dissociation discussed earlier.

Diprotic Systems Fractional Compositions, 3 The derivations for the fractional composition equations for diprotic systems is similar to that for the monoprotic system (don t worry about this - let s just look at the equations): α H2 A = [H 2 A] F α HA = [HA ] F α A 2 = [A2 ] F = = = [H + ] 2 [H + ] 2 + [H + ]K 1 + K 1 K 2 K 1 [H + ] [H + ] 2 + [H + ]K 1 + K 1 K 2 K 1 K 2 [H + ] 2 + [H + ]K 1 + K 1 K 2 Note: These equations can be applied equally to bases, where (K1 = Kw/Kb2 and K2 = Kw/Kb1) Fractional composition diagram for fumaric acid (trans-butenedioic acid). At low ph, H2A is dominant. At intermediate ph, HA is dominant; and, at high ph, A 2 dominates. Because pk1 and pk2 are not separated very much, the fraction of HA never gets very close to unity.

Isoelectronic and Isoionic ph In biochemistry, polyprotic molecules are often discussed in terms of the isoelectric or isoionic ph. Let s consider a simple diprotic system: alanine. The isoionic point (or isoionic ph) is the ph obtained when the pure, neutral polyprotic acid HA (the neutral zwitterion) is dissolved in water (i.e. the ph of the pure acid) Ions: H2A +, A, H + and OH Principal Species: HA, [H2A + ] [A ] The isoelectric point (or isoelectric ph) is the ph at which the average charge of the polyprotic acid is 0. Principal Species: uncharged form HA, [H2A + ] = [A ] Equilibria: Always some H2A + + A HA.

Isoelectronic and Isoionic ph, 2 When alanine is dissolved, the ph is the isoionic ph. Since HA is the intermediate form of the diprotic acid, H2A +, then the [H + ] is given by Isoionic point: [H + ] = K 1K 2 F + K 1 K w K 1 + F For 0.10 M alanine, the isoionic ph is From [H + ], K1 and K2, [H2A + ] = 1.68 10 5 M and [A ] = 1.76 10 5 M for pure alanine in water (the isoionic solution). There is a slight excess of A because HA is a slightly stronger acid than it is a base. It dissociates to make A a little more than it reacts with water to make H2A +. The isoelectric point is the ph at which [H2A + ] = [A ], and, therefore, the average charge of alanine is 0. To go from the isoionic solution (pure HA in water) to the isoelectric solution, we could add just enough strong acid to decrease [A ] and increase [H2A + ] until they are equal. Adding acid necessarily lowers the ph. For alanine, the isoelectric ph must be lower than the isoionic ph.

Isoelectronic and Isoionic ph, 3 Calculate the isoelectric ph by first writing expressions for [H2A + ] and [A ]: Setting [H2A + ] = [A ], we find which yields Isoelectronic point: ph = 1 2 (pk 1 + pk 2 ) For a diprotic amino acid, the isoelectric ph is halfway between the two pka values. The isoelectric ph of alanine is 0.5(2.34 + 9.87) = 6.10 The isoelectric and isoionic points for a polyprotic acid are almost the same. At the isoelectric ph, the average charge of the molecule is 0; thus [H2A +] = [A ] and ph = 0.5(pK1 + pk2). At the isoionic point, the ph is given by a more complex equation (see previous slide), and [H2A + ] is not exactly equal to [A ].

Isoelectronic Focusing Isoelectronic focusing is a technique used for separation of proteins. At the isoelectronic point, the average charge of all proteins is zero. The application of a strong electric field will not result in migration of these proteins if they are at their isoelectronic ph s. However, if a medium is used in which there is a gradient of ph values, proteins migrate (positive to negative poles and negative to positive poles) until they reach regions of their isoelectronic ph s. (i.e., Each protein is focused in one region at its isoelectric ph). Lab-on-a-chip isoelectric focusing: 6-mm-long 100 μm-wide 25-μm-deep capillary etched into silica glass. If a molecule diffuses out of its isoelectric region, it becomes charged and immediately migrates back to its isoelectric zone. (i) Fluorescent ph markers. (ii) and (iii) Separation of fluorescence-labeled proteins: (OVA) ovalbumin; (GFP) green fluorescent protein; (BSA) bovine serum albumin; (Tfer) transferrin; (CA) carbonic anhydrase; (PhB) phosphorylase B; and (Hb) hemoglobin. [G. J. Sommer, A. K. Singh, and A. V. Hatch, On-Chip Isoelectric Focusing Using Photopolymerized Immobilized ph Gradients, Analyt. Chem. 2008, 80, 3327.]