Titration Curves equivalence point

Similar documents
Titration a solution of known concentration, called a standard solution

Understanding the shapes of acid-base titration curves AP Chemistry

Bellwork: Answer these in your notes. What is the [H + ] of a solution with a ph of 4.90? Name this acid: H 3 PO 4. Name this base: KOH

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

Chapter 17 Additional Aspects of

Chapter 17 Additional Aspects of

Applications of Aqueous Equilibria Chapter 15. Titration Curves & Indicators Sections 4-5

Buffer Effectiveness 19

Acid Base Equilibria

Chapter 17 Additional Aspects of Aqueous Equilibria (Part A)

STOICHIOMETRY OF ACID-BASE NEUTRALIZATION REACTIONS. Ms. Grobsky

Chapter 17 Answers. Practice Examples [H3O ] 0.018M, 1a. HF = M. 1b. 30 drops. 2a.

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

Chapter 17 Additional Aspects of Aqueous Equilibria (Part A)

Stoichiometry of Acid-Base Neutralization Reactions. Ms. Grobsky

Chapter 15. Acid-Base Equilibria

The Common Ion Effect

CHEMISTRY Matter and Change

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

capable of neutralizing both acids and bases

Lecture #11-Buffers and Titrations The Common Ion Effect

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Aqueous Equilibria Pearson Education, Inc. Mr. Matthew Totaro Legacy High School AP Chemistry

Acid and Base Titrations - Equation Guide

Titration of a Weak Acid with a Strong Base

Chap 17 Additional Aspects of Aqueous Equilibria. Hsu Fu Yin

The ph of aqueous salt solutions

Acids and Bases. Reviewing Vocabulary CHAPTER ASSESSMENT CHAPTER 19. Compare and contrast each of the following terms.

Ch. 17 Applications of Aqueous Equilibria: Buffers and Titrations

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

Chapter 15. Acid-Base Equilibria

Chapter 15 Acid-Base Equilibria

Chapter 17 Additional Aspects of

Lecture 12. Acid/base reactions. Equilibria in aqueous solutions.

Homework #7 Chapter 8 Applications of Aqueous Equilibrium

Buffer Calculations. The Standard Equilibrium Approach to Calculating a Buffer s ph

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

Kotz 7 th ed. Section 18.3, pp

Unit Nine Notes N C U9

ACIDS & BASES PROPERTIES OF ACIDS ACIDS PROPERTIES OF ACIDS PROPERTIES OF ACIDS 11/1/2016

AP CHEMISTRY NOTES 10-1 AQUEOUS EQUILIBRIA: BUFFER SYSTEMS

Chem Chapter 18: Sect 1-3 Common Ion Effect; Buffers ; Acid-Base Titrations Sect 4-5 Ionic solubility Sect 6-7 Complex Formation

-a base contains an OH group and ionizes in solutions to produce OH - ions: Neutralization: Hydrogen ions (H + ) in solution form

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

School of Chemistry, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Howard College Campus, Durban. CHEM191 Tutorial 1: Buffers

Titration Curves. What is in the beaker at each stage of a titration? Beaker A Beaker B Beaker C Beaker D. 20 ml NaOH Added

Buffer Effectiveness, Titrations & ph curves. Section

5 Acid Base Reactions

Buffer solutions Strong acids and bases dissociate completely and change the ph of a solution drastically. Buffers are solutions that resist changes i

Lecture Presentation. Chapter 16. Aqueous Ionic Equilibrium. Sherril Soman Grand Valley State University Pearson Education, Inc.

A 95 g/mol B 102 /mol C 117 g/mol D 126 g/mol E 152 g/mol

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

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

Operational Skills. Operational Skills. The Common Ion Effect. A Problem To Consider. A Problem To Consider APPLICATIONS OF AQUEOUS EQUILIBRIA

Consider a normal weak acid equilibrium: Which direction will the reaction shift if more A is added? What happens to the % ionization of HA?

ACID-BASE EQUILIBRIA. Chapter 14 Big Idea Six

Acid Base Equilibrium Review

CHM 112 Dr. Kevin Moore

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

Generally, buffer solutions are prepared from a conjugate acid/base pair, such as acetic acid/sodium acetate or ammonium chloride/ammonia.

Chapter 17. Additional Aspects of Aqueous Equilibria 蘇正寬 Pearson Education, Inc.

Chemistry 132 NT. Acid-Base Equilibria

Acids and Bases. A strong base is a substance that completely ionizes in aqueous solutions to give a cation and a hydroxide ion.

Acid-Base Solutions - Applications

AP Chemistry. CHAPTER 17- Buffers and Ksp 17.1 The Common Ion Effect Buffered Solutions. Composition and Action of Buffered Solutions

ACID-BASE REACTIONS. Titrations Acid-Base Titrations

Chapter 10. Acids, Bases, and Salts

Acids, Bases and ph Preliminary Course. Steffi Thomas 14/09/2017

CHAPTER 8: ACID/BASE EQUILIBRIUM

Chapter 16. Equilibria in Aqueous Systems

Chapter 15. Titration Curves for Complex Acid/Base Systems

Acid-Base Equilibria and Solubility Equilibria

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

CHAPTER Acid & Base

Chapter 15. Preview. Lesson Starter Objectives Hydronium Ions and Hydroxide Ions The ph Scale Calculations Involving ph

Chapter 15 Acid Base Equilibria

Lecture 8. Making a Buffer. Buffers. Professor Hicks Inorganic Chemistry (CHE152)

Acid Base Titrations

Acid and Bases. Physical Properties. Chemical Properties. Indicators. Corrosive when concentrated. Corrosive when concentrated.

Chemistry with Mr. Faucher. Acid-Base Titration

Chemistry 201: General Chemistry II - Lecture

Chapter 14. Principles of Neutralization Titrations

Titration region & buffer calculations. An acid base region is a circumstance

1.8K: Define a buffer as relatively large amounts of a weak acid or base and its conjugate in equilibrium that maintain a relatively constant ph when

Strong and Weak. Acids and Bases

2] What is the difference between the end point and equivalence point for a monobasicmonoacid

Problem 1. What is the ph of a 291mL sample of 2.993M benzoic acid (C 6 H 5 COOH) (K a =6.4x10-5 )?

Name Class Date. volume of solution molarity of solution amount of solute in moles

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

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

Chapter 16 Aqueous Ionic Equilibrium Buffer Solutions

What is an acid? What is a base?

SCH4U Chapter 8 review

Aqueous Reactions and Solution Stoichiometry (continuation)

(aq)], does not contain sufficient base [C 2 H 3 O 2. (aq)] to be a buffer. If acid is added, there is too little conjugate base [C 2 H 3 O 2

Molecular Definitions of Acids and Bases: H 2 O (l)

Titration Curves Name: Date: Period:

Make a mixture of a weak acid and its conjugate base (as the SALT) Make a mixture of a weak base and its conjugate acid (as the SALT)

ACIDS AND BASES. HCl(g) = hydrogen chloride HCl(aq) = hydrochloric acid HCl(g) H + (aq) + Cl (aq) ARRHENIUS THEORY

Unit 10: Acids and Bases

Transcription:

1

Here is an example of a titration curve, produced when a strong base is added to a strong acid. This curve shows how ph varies as 0.100 M NaOH is added to 50.0 ml of 0.100 M HCl. The equivalence point of the titration is the point at which exactly enough titrant has been added to react with all of the substance being titrated with no titrant left over. In other words, at the equivalence point, the number of moles of titrant added so far corresponds exactly to the number of moles of substance being titrated according to the reaction stoichiometry. (In an acid base titration, there is a 1:1 acid:base stoichiometry, so the equivalence point is the point where the moles of titrant added equals the moles of substance initially in the solution being titrated.) 2

Notice that the ph increases slowly at first, then rapidly as it nears the equivalence point. The ph increases slowly at first because the ph scale is logarithmic, which means that a ph of 1 will have 10 times the hydronium ion concentration than a ph of 2. Thus, as the hydronium ion is initally removed, it takes a lot of base to change its concentration by a factor of 10, but as more and more hydronium ion is removed, less base is required to change its concentration by a factor of 10. Near the equivalence point, a change of a factor of 10 occurs very quickly, which is why the graph is extremely steep at this point. As the hydronium ion concentration becomes very low, it will again take a lot of base to increase the hydroxide ion concentration by 10 fold to change the ph significantly. 3

Calculate the ph at any point, including the equivalence point, in an acid base titration. At the equivalence point, the ph = 7.00 for strong acid strong base titrations. However, in other types of titrations, this is not the case The original number of moles of H + in the solution is: 4

What is the ph when 49.00 ml of 0.100 M NaOH solution have been added to 50.00 ml of 0.100 M HCl solution? Because it is a strong acid base reaction, the reaction simplifies to: H + (aq) + OH (aq) H 2 O (l) The original number of moles of H + in the solution is: 5

What is the ph when 49.00 ml of 0.100 M NaOH solution have been added to 50.00 ml of 0.100 M HCl solution? Because it is a strong acid base reaction, the reaction simplifies to: H + (aq) + OH (aq) H 2 O (l) The original number of moles of H + in the solution is: 50.00 x 10 3 L x 0.100 M HCl = 5.00 x 10 3 moles The number of moles of OH added is : 6

What is the ph when 49.00 ml of 0.100 M NaOH solution have been added to 50.00 ml of 0.100 M HCl solution? Because it is a strong acid base reaction, the reaction simplifies to: H + (aq) + OH (aq) H 2 O (l) The original number of moles of H + in the solution is: 50.00 x 10 3 L x 0.100 M HCl = 5.00 x 10 3 moles The number of moles of OH added is : 49.00 x 10 3 L x 0.100 M OH = 4.90 x 10 3 moles 7

What is the ph when 49.00 ml of 0.100 M NaOH solution have been added to 50.00 ml of 0.100 M HCl solution? Because it is a strong acid base reaction, the reaction simplifies to: H + (aq) + OH (aq) H 2 O (l) The original number of moles of H + in the solution is: 50.00 x 10 3 L x 0.100 M HCl = 5.00 x 10 3 moles The number of moles of OH added is : 49.00 x 10 3 L x 0.100 M OH = 4.90 x 10 3 moles Thus there remains: (5.00 x 10 3 ) (4.90 x 10 3 ) = 1.0 x 10 4 moles H + (aq) The total volume of solution is 0.04900 L + 0.05000 L = 0.09900 L [H + ] = {1.0 x 10 4 moles / 0.09900 L } = 1.0 x 10 3 M ph = 3.00 8

Titrations Involving a Weak Acid or Weak Base Titration curve of a weak acid being titrated by a strong base: Here, 0.100 M NaOH is being added to 50.0 ml of 0.100 M acetic acid. There are three major differences between this curve (in blue) and the one we saw before (in black): 1. The weak acid solution has a higher initial ph. 2. The ph rises more rapidly at the start, but less rapidly near the equivalence point. 3. The ph at the equivalence point does not equal 7.00. POINT OF EMPHASIS : The equivalence point for a weak acid strong base titration has a ph > 7.00. For a strong acid weak base or weak acid strong base titration, the ph will change rapidly at the very beginning and then have a gradual slope until near the equivalence point. The gradual slope results from a buffer solution being produced by the addition of the strong acid or base, which resists rapid change in ph until the added acid or base exceeds the buffer's capacity and the rapid ph change occurs near the equivalence point. 9

EXAMPLE: What is the ph when 30.0 ml of 0.100 M NaOH have been added to 50.0 ml of 0.100 M acetic acid? STEP 1: Stochiometric calculation: The original number of moles of HC 2 H 3 O 2 in the solution is : 50.0 x 10 3 L x 0.100 M = 5.00 x 10 3 moles HC 2 H 3 O 2 Similarly, there are 3.00 x 10 3 moles of OH due to the NaOH solution. The reaction goes to completion: OH (aq) + HC 2 H 3 O 2 (aq) > C 2 H 3 O 2 (aq) + H 2 O (l) The total volume is 80.0 ml. We now calculate the resulting molarities : [HC 2 H 3 O 2 ] = { 2.00 x 10 3 mol HC 2 H 3 O 2 / 0.0800 L } = 0.0250 M [C 2 H 3 O 2 ] = { 3.00 x 10 3 mol C 2 H 3 O 2 } / 0.0800 L } = 0.0375 M STEP 2: Equilibrium calculation, using simplification: K a = { [H + ][C 2 H 3 O 2 ] / [HC 2 H 3 O 2 ] } = 1.8 x 10 5 [H + ] = { K A [HC 2 H 3 O 2 ] / [C 2 H 3 O 2 ] } = { (1.8 x 10 5 )(0.0250) / (0.0375) } = 1.2 x 5 M ph = log(1.2 x 10 5 ) = 4.92 10

Titration curve of a weak base being titrated by a strong acid: Here, 0.100 M HCl is being added to 50.0 ml of 0.100 M ammonia solution. As in the weak acid strong base titration, there are three major differences betwee this curve (in blue) and a strong base strong acid one (in black): (Note that the strong base strong acid titration curve is identical to the strong acid strong base titration, but flipped vertically.) 1. The weak acid solution has a lower initial ph. 2. The ph drops more rapidly at the start, but less rapidly near the equivalence point. 3. The ph at the equivalence point does not equal 7.00. POINT OF EMPHASIS : The equivalence point for a weak base strong acid titration has a ph < 7.00. 11

Titrations of Polyprotic Acids An example of a polyprotic acid is H 2 CO 3 which neutralizes in two steps: H 2 CO 3 (aq) + OH (aq) H 2 O (l) + HCO 3 (aq) HCO 3 (aq) + OH (aq) H 2 O (l) + CO 3 2 (aq) The titration curve for these reactions will look like this, with two equivalence points. 12

Uses of Titration Curves Use titration data or a titration curve to calculate reaction quantities such as the concentration of the substance being titrated. The most common use of titrations is for measuring unknown concentrations. This is done by titrating a known volume of the unknown solution with a solution of known concentration (where the two react in a predictable manner) and finding the volume of titrant needed to reach the equivalence point using some method appropriate to the particular reaction. Then, the volume and concentration of titrant can be used to calculate the moles of titrant added, which, when used with the reaction stoichiometry, gives the number of moles of substance being titrated. Finally, this quantity, along with the volume of substance being titrated, gives the unknown concentration. For acid base titrations, the equivalence point can be found very easily. A ph meter is simply placed in the solution being titrated and the ph is measured after various volumes of titrant have been added to produce a titration curve. The equivalence point can then be read off the curve. 13

EXAMPLE: If 80.0 ml of 0.200 M NaOH are required to reach the equivalence poin in a titration of 50.0 ml of hydrofluoric acid, what is the concentration the hydrofluoric acid? The neutralization reaction goes to completion: HF + OH F + H 2 O The number of moles of NaOH added was: n NaOH = [NaOH] x V NaOH n NaOH = 0.200 M x 80.0 ml n NaOH = 16 mmol Since each NaOH produces 1 OH, n OH = n NaOH = 16 mmol From the 1:1 stoichiometry between HF and OH, n HF = n OH = 16 mmol So, the concentration of the original hydrofluoric acid solution was: [HF] = n HF / V HF [HF] = 16 mmol / 50 ml [HF] = 0.320 M In the same way, knowing the equivalence point can also be used to calculate other unknown quantities of interest in acid base reactions, such concentration of titrant or volume of solution being titrated, provided that enough other information is known to perform the calculations. 14