Acid-Base I
Acid-Base I
Acid-Base I
Water
We typically talk about acid-base reactions in aqueousphase environments -- that is, in the presence of water. The most fundamental acid-base reaction is the dissociation of water:
H2O ===== H+ + OH In this reaction, water breaks apart to form a hydrogen ion (H+) and a hydroxyl ion (OH-). In pure water, we can define a special equilibrium constant (Kw) as follows: Kw = ( H+) (OH-) = 1 X 10-14
Where Kw is the equilibrium constant for water (unitless) (H+) is the molar concentration of hydrogen (OH-) is the molar concentration of hydroxide An equilibrium constant less than one (1) suggests that the reaction prefers to stay on the side of the reactants -- in this case, water likes to stay as water. Because water hardly ionizes, it is a very poor conductor of electricity
Bronsted-Lowery: acid: anything that donates a [H+] (proton donor) base: anything that accepts a [H+] (proton acceptor) normal Bronsted-Lowery equation: acid + base <---> acid + base example: HNO2 + H2O <---> NO2- + H3O+ Each acid has a conjugate base and each base has a conjugate acid. These conjugate pairs only differ by a proton. In this example: HNO2 is the acid, H2O is the base, NO2- is the conj. base, and H3O+ is the conj. acid.
Lewis: acid : accepts an electron pair base : donates an electron pair The advantage of this theory is that many more reactions can be considered acidbase reactions because they do not have to occur in solution.
Salts A salt is formed when an acid and a base are mixed and the acid releases H+ ions while the base releases OH- ions. This process is called hydrolysis. The pH of the salt depends on the strengths of the original acids and bases: Acid Base Salt pH strong- strong pH = 7 weakstrongpH > 7strong-weakpH < 7 weak-weak depends on which is stronger acid base
pH What is of interest in this reading, however, is the acid-base nature of a substance like water. Water actually behaves both like an acid and a base. The acidity or basicity of a substance is defined most typically by the pH value, defined as below: pH = - log (H+) = log 1/(H+)
At equilibrium, the concentration of H+ is 10-7, so we can calculate the pH of water at equilbrium as: pH = -log[H+]= -log[10-7] = 7 Solutions with a pH of seven (7) are said to be neutral, while those with pH values below seven (7) are defined as acidic and those above pH of seven (7) as being basic.
Solutions with a pH of seven (7) are said to be neutral, while those with pH values below seven (7) are defined as acidic and those above pH of seven (7) as being basic. pOH gives us another way to measure the acidity of a solution. It is just the opposite of pH. A high pOH means the solution is acidic while a low pOH means the solution is basic. pOH = -log[OH-] pH + pOH = 14.00
To calculate a pH value, it is easiest to follow the standard "Start, Change, Equilibrium" process. Example Problem: Determine the pH of a 0.25 M solution of HBr
Strong Bases: Like strong acids, these bases completely ionize in solution and are always represented in their ionized form in chemical equations. There are only seven (7) strong bases: LiOH, NaOH, KOH, RbOH, Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, Ba(OH)2
Weak Acids:
These are the most common type of acids. They follow the equation: HA(aq) <---> H+(aq) + A(aq) The equilibrium constant for the dissociation of an acid is known as Ka. The larger the value of Ka, the stronger the acid.
Kb is the base-dissociation constant: Ka x Kb = Kw = 1.00x10-14 To calculate the pH of a weak base, we must follow a very similar "Start, Change, Equilibrium" process as we did with the weak acid, however we must add a few steps.
Acid-Base Titrations An acid-base titration is when you add a base to an acid until the equivalence point is reached which is where the moles of acid equals the moles of base. For the titration of a strong base and a strong acid, this equivalence point is reached when the pH of the solution is seven (7) as seen on the following titration curve: For the titration of a strong base with a weak acid, the equivalence point is reached when the pH is greater than seven (7). The half equivalence point is when half of the total amount of base needed to neutralize the acid has been added. It is at this point where the pH = pKa of the weak acid.
Exampl : 50 ml ac 0,1 N + 50 ml NaOH 0,1 N early : pH =.. Added 10 ml NaOH : pH =.. Equivalence point : pH = .
buffer
Syarat-syarat 1. Ada sisa asam lemahnya(buffer asam Ada sisa basa lemahnya(buffer basa) 2. Di encerkan pH tidak berubah 3. Kapasitas maks bila pH = pKa(buffer as 4. Kapasitas buffer, pH sedikit berubah bila + asam atau basa sedikit
pI = (pKa2 + pKa3) /2 Bila pada asam amino terdapat lebih banyak NH2 dibanding COOH
Bila konsentrasi HCO3-/ H2CO3 = 20 maka pH darah NORMAL 7,4 diketahui pKa = 6,1
3. ALKALOSIS METABOLIK
PENINGKATAN FRAKSI BIKARBONAT pada obstruksi usus, makan alkali berlebihan
4. ALKALOSIS RESPIRATORIK
TERJADI KARENA PENURUNAN FRAKSI AS KARBONAT PADA: HIPERVENTILASI HISTERIS PENYAKIT SSP KOMA HEPATIK, RESPIRATOR YG TIDAK TEPAT