Chapter 13 Acids and Bases: The Molecules Responsible for Sour and Bitter

Similar documents
Chapter 14: Acids and Bases

INTRODUCTORY CHEMISTRY Concepts and Critical Thinking Seventh Edition by Charles H. Corwin

Acids and Bases. Two important classification of compounds - Acids and Bases. Properties of BASES

Acids and Bases. Chapter 11

Acids and Bases. Acids and Bases in our Lives. Chapter 11

CHAPTER 19. Acids, Bases, and Salts Acid Base Theories

What are Acids and Bases? What are some common acids you know? What are some common bases you know? Where is it common to hear about ph balanced

Name: Date: Number: Acids

Lesson Five: Acids, Bases, ph, and Buffers

Chapter 14. Objectives

Chapter 14: Acids and Bases

Chapter 9 Acid-base reactions

Acids and Bases. Acids and Bases in. our Lives. Acids and Bases in our Lives. Acids and Bases in our Lives. Chapter 11

Unit 13 Acids and Bases E.Q. What are the differences between acids and bases?

Acids and Bases. Properties, Reactions, ph, and Titration

Chapter 15 - Acids and Bases Fundamental Concepts

Acids and bases, as we use them in the lab, are usually aqueous solutions. Ex: when we talk about hydrochloric acid, it is actually hydrogen chloride

Chapter Outline. Ch 8: Aqueous Solutions: Chemistry of the Hydrosphere. H 2 S + Cu 2+ CuS(s) + 2H + (Fe, Ni, Mn also) HS O 2 HSO 4

Chapter 16 - Acids and Bases

Acids and Bases. Chapter 15. Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Unit 4 Toxins, Section IV, L17-22

Aqueous solutions of acids have a sour Aqueous solutions of bases taste bitter

Acids and Bases. Chapter 11

Ch. 8 - Solutions, Acids & Bases. Solution = a homogeneous mixture of 2 or more substances

SNC2D CHEMISTRY 2/24/2013. CHEMICAL REACTIONS L Acids & Bases (P ) Activity: Introduction to (2DCHEM-ASG3) Introduction to Acids & Bases

Acids and Bases. How do acids and bases behave in water? Acid or Base Acetic acid HC 2. (aq) Vinegar Sour Red Yes Acid Benzoic acid HC 7

Student Notes Acids and Bases

O + (aq) In this reaction, the water molecule is a Brønsted-Lowry base. It accepts a proton from HF to form H 3

ACIDS & BASES. Acids & Bases 1

Chapter 14 Acids and Bases

Families of Chemical Compounds. Chapter 9

Everyday you encounter a variety of different acids and bases. Below is a list of som common acids and bases

Water, the SPECIAL Equilibrium

Toxins 4/27/2010. Acids and Bases Lab. IV-17 to IV-22

Properties of Acids and Bases SECTION 1

What is an acid? What is a base?

15 Acids, Bases, and Salts. Lemons and limes are examples of foods that contain acidic solutions.

Acids and Bases. Acids and Bases in. our Lives. Acids and Bases in our Lives. Acids and Bases in our Lives. Chapter 11

Acids and Bases: Chapter 14 & 15

What are the properties of acids and bases?

Unit 12: Acids & Bases. Aim: What are the definitions and properties of an acid and a base? Properties of an Acid. Taste Sour.

The Chemistry of Acids and Bases

10.1 Acids and Bases in Aqueous Solution

Written by: - SHAHZAD IFTIKHAR Contact # Website: s:

ACIDS AND BASES. for it cannot be But I am pigeon-liver d and lack gall To make oppression bitter Hamlet

Downloaded from

CHEMISTRY Matter and Change

What is an acid? What is a base?

Acids and Bases. Click a hyperlink or folder tab to view the corresponding slides. Exit

Acids and Bases. Feb 28 4:40 PM

Understand what acids and alkalis are, and where they are found.

Chapter 7: Phenomena. Chapter 7 Acids and Bases. Acids and Bases. Acids and Bases. Acids and Bases

What is an acid? What is a base?

The Chemistry of Acids and Bases

Chapter Menu Chapter Menu

I. What Are the Properties of Acids?

Acids and Bases. Reading Assignments: Acids. Bases. Chapter 15 in R. Chang, Chemistry, 8th Ed., McGraw-Hill, 2005

Amount of substance dissolved in 1 L of water

CHAPTER Acid & Base

Chemistry I Notes Unit 10: Acids and Bases

EXPERIMENT 11 Acids, Bases, and ph

4.5: Acids and Bases. SCH3U: Solutions and Solubility. Properties of Pure and Aqueous Substances. Arrhenius Theory. Acid:

The Chemistry of Acids and Bases

UNIT 9 CHEMISTRY OF SOLUTIONS

Acids and Bases. Chapters 20 and 21

INTRODUCTION TO ACIDS AND BASES

ACIDS, BASES & SALTS DR. RUCHIKA YADU

HA(s) + H 2 O(l) = H 3 O + (aq) + A (aq) b) NH 3 (g) + H 2 O(l) = NH 4 + (aq) + OH (aq) Acid no. H + type base no. OH type

BUT FIRST LET S REVIEW IONS AND BONDING. What is the Lewis dot diagram for Magnesium? 2+ 2-

Grace King High School Chemistry Test Review

Acids and Bases Unit 13

REACTIONS OF ACIDS. J:\Science\Chemistry\Stage 1 Notes\Acids & Bases\Reactionsofacids.doc

Chapter 8. Table of Contents. Section 1 Acids, Bases, and ph. Section 2 Reactions of Acids with Bases. Section 3 Acids, Bases, and Salts in the Home

CHEMISTRY. Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Acids and Bases. Acids

Fill in as many empirical properties for acids and bases as you can...

Obj: Observe and describe neutralization reactions. Copy: Write the balanced chemical equation for the neutralization of HCl with KOH.

Lab: Cabbages in Chemistry 3pts ec printing in COLOR / 2pts B&W

Acids and Bases. Chapter 15. Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

ed. Brad Collins Aqueous Chemistry Chapter 5 Some images copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Sunday, August 18, 13

Catalyzing thoughts: 1. How are ionic compounds different from covalent compounds when dissolved in water?

Chapter 15 Study Questions

CH19 Bronsted-Lowry Definitions

UNIT #11: Acids and Bases ph and poh Neutralization Reactions Oxidation and Reduction

Types of reactions: Acid-base reactions *

SCHOOL YEAR CH- 13 IONS IN AQUEOUS SOLUTIONS AND COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES SUBJECT: CHEMISTRY GRADE : 11 TEST A

Acids, Bases, and Buffers

ELECTROLYTES & NEUTRALIZATION

NURS1004 Week 12 Lecture 1 Acid Base Balance Prepared by Didy Button

CHAPTER 3 WATER AND THE FITNESS OF THE ENVIRONMENT. Section B: The Dissociation of Water Molecules

Double replacement reactions

Examples of Strong Acids: Strong Acid Formula Common Source Hydrochloric Acid HCl Stomach Acid

Unit 24 Acids and Bases (Chapter 7)

Properties of Acids and Bases

Which substance would most neutralize an acidic food? A. dairy (ph 5 7) B. water (ph 6 7) C. citrus fruit (ph 2 3) D. baking soda (ph 8 9)

Acids, Bases and Salts

Strong and Weak. Acids and Bases

5 Weak Acids, Bases and their Salts

Name Date Class ACID-BASE THEORIES

Name. Academic Chemistry. Acid Base. Notes. Unit #14 Test Date: cincochem.pbworks.com

Transcription:

Nivaldo J. Tro http://www.cengage.com/chemistry/tro Chapter 13 Acids and Bases: The Molecules Responsible for Sour and Bitter Mark Erickson Hartwick College

Acids Sourness in foods is caused by acids, molecules that release protons. The protons or hydrogen ions react with proteins on the tongue. Acids and their chemical opposites, bases, are all around us. We eat them, smell them, and use them in everyday products.

Properties of Acids Acids dissolve metals But not as rapidly as James Bond movies depict Acids taste sour Citric acid in lemons React with bases to form salt and water HCl + NaOH H 2 O + NaCl Acids turn blue litmus paper red.

Common Laboratory Acids

Properties of Bases Bases feel slippery. Bitter taste React with acids to form water and salt in neutralization reactions NaOH + HCl H 2 O + NaCl Bases turn red litmus paper blue. Bases are found in many cleaning products. Burn skin and damage gastrointestinal tract on contact

Common Laboratory Bases

Concept Check 13.1 Write a chemical equation to show the neutralization of hydrochloric acid (HCl) by sodium hydroxide (KOH).

Concept Check 13.1 Solution All neutralization equations have the form acid + base H 2 O + salt where the salt is composed of the anion from the acid and the cation from the base. So in this case we write the balanced chemical equation: HCl + KOH H 2 O + KCl

Acids-Bases Molecular Definitions Arrhenius Brønsted-Lowry Acids produce hydrogen ions (H + ) in solution. Bases produce hydroxide ions (OH ) in solution. But Arrhenius definitions do not apply in all cases. What about ammonia? Broader definition Works in solutions that do not contain water Focuses on the transfer of protons (H + ions) In the Brønsted-Lowry definition, acids are proton donors and bases are proton acceptors.

Concept Check 13.2 Identify the Brønsted Lowry acid and base in the following reaction: HF + NH 3 NH 4 + + F -

Concept Check 13.2 Solution Because HF is the proton donor, it is the acid. NH 3 is accepting the proton, making it the base. HF + NH 3 NH 4 + + F Using arrows and Lewis structures to describe the proton transfer, we have: H H H N + H F H N H + F H H

Strong and Weak Acids Acids that completely dissociate, like HCl, are strong acids. HCl + H 2 O H 3 O + + Cl Acids in an aqueous environment, which primarily remain undissociated, are weak acids. A double arrow indicates that the dissolution does not go to completion. CH 3 COOH + H 2 O H 3 O + + CH 3 COO

Strong and Weak In the same manner, bases are considered either strong or weak.

H 3 O + Concentration The acidity of a solution is normally specified by the concentration of H 3 O + in moles per liter of solution, M. Strong acids: Acid concentration equals concentration of H 3 O + Weak acids: Acid concentration is greater than concentration of H 3 O + Pure water has a H 3 O + concentration of 1 10-7 M. 2H 2 O H 3 O + + OH

The ph Scale Pure water with H 3 O + concentration of 1.0 10-7 M has a ph of 7. H 3 O + concentration greater than that of pure water is termed acidic. ph values less than 7 H 3 O + concentration less than that of pure water is termed basic. ph values greater than 7 For every change of one unit on the ph scale, H 3 O + changes by a factor of 10.

The ph Scale

Concept Check 13.3 The ideal ph of a swimming pool is 7.2. You measure the ph of your pool to be 7.9. What should you add, acid or base, to restore your pool to the ideal ph?

Concept Check 13.3 Solution A ph of 7.9 is too basic compared to the ideal ph of 7.2. Adding the right amount of acid will drop the ph to 7.2.

Common Acids: Citric Acid Naturally occurring citric acid and other acids in acidic foods offer spoilage resistance.

Common Acids: Lactic Acid Fermentation with lactic acid-forming bacteria helps preserve low-acid foods like cucumbers and cabbage. This technique is called pickling.

Common Acids: Acetic Acid Vinegar is a solution of acetic acid in water. Vinegar is from the French vin aigre, meaning sour wine. Oxygen will convert ethanol in wine to acetic acid.

Common Acids: Salicylic Acid Salicylic acid is a precursor to acetylsalicylic acid, aspirin, the most widely used of all drugs.

Wine All wines contain 0.60 to 0.80% acid content by volume. From grapes and from fermentation The balance of these acids determines the quality of the wine.

Wine

Common Bases Bases have a bitter taste. Evolutionary adaptation that warns against (often poisonous) alkaloids? basic nitrogen N H CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 Coniine (toxic alkaloid from hemlock) Active ingredient in antacids These are substances that dissociate in water to form a metal ion and a base.

Common Bases: Household Products Sodium bicarbonate Taken directly or as Alka-Seltzer Baking Calcium carbonate Active ingredient in Tums Magnesium hydroxide Milk of Magnesia: laxative effect In combination with Al +3 ions (Mylanta): constipating effect to balance Ammonia and sodium hydroxide Household cleaning products

Concept Check 13.4 Describe the antacid action of sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO 3 ) with a chemical equation. Is sodium bicarbonate acting as an acid or a base?

Concept Check 13.4 Solution Sodium bicarbonate is a weak base. It neutralizes the HCl present in the stomach. HCl + NaHCO 3 H 2 CO 3 + NaCl H 2 CO 3 (carbonic acid) is quickly decomposes to carbon dioxide and water. H 2 CO 3 H 2 O + CO 2 (burp)

The Chemistry of Baking Baking powder is used to produce carbon dioxide gas pockets in dough, making the baked product lighter and fluffier. Sodium bicarbonate Sodium aluminum sulfate Calcium acid phosphate Acidic salts combine with the basic salts, making carbon dioxide and water. Warm carbon dioxide gas expands during baking. Yeast produces CO 2 and ethanol for a similar effect with breads.

Acid Rain: Fossil Fuel Combustion SO 2 and NO 2 formed during fossil fuel combustion combine with atmospheric water to form acid rain. Unpolluted rain is slightly acidic due to atmospheric carbon dioxide. Most acidic rainfall occurs in the northeastern U.S.

Acid Rain: The Effects The environment into which acid rain falls determines its fate. In some cases naturally occurring geology, such as limestone, can serve to neutralize the acid. Rapid acidification occurs when neutralization is not possible.

Acid Rain: The Effects Lakes and streams Approximately 2000 lakes and streams in the eastern U.S. have lowered ph. Some aquatic species cannot survive. Emissions from U.S. coal-fired power plants have also contributed to the acidification of Canadian lakes.

Acid Rain: The Effects Building materials Acids dissolve stone, marble, and paint. Rusting of steel is accelerated Forests and reduced visibility Trees cannot grow and fend off disease. Sulfate aerosols account for 50% of visibility problems in the eastern U.S.

Clean Air Act Amendments Cut SO 2 emissions to half of 1980 levels by 2010 Use low-sulfur coal or remove sulfur before burning Use flue gas scrubbers Conservation and efficiency of customers SO 2 emission allowances Can be traded among utilities but Congress reduces number of allowances as per regulations

Chapter Summary Molecular Concept What describes an acid? What describes a base? ph Acid rain Societal Impact Acids and bases are a part of our daily lives, including their presence in a number of the foods we eat. Acid rain is a significant problem in the U.S. and Canada. Legislation (the Clean Air Act) has been passed to help the problem of acid rain.