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Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

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Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria. Chemistry, The Central Science, 10th edition Theodore L. Brown; H. Eugene LeMay, Jr.; and Bruce E. Bursten. Troy Wood University of Buffalo Buffalo, NY  2006, Prentice Hall. Is NH 3 an acid, base, or could it be both?. Acid Base Both. Correct Answer:. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Chemistry, The Central Science, 10th edition Theodore L. Brown; H. Eugene LeMay, Jr.; and Bruce E. Bursten Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria Troy Wood University of Buffalo Buffalo, NY 2006, Prentice
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Page 1: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Chemistry, The Central Science, 10th edition

Theodore L. Brown; H. Eugene LeMay, Jr.;and Bruce E. Bursten

Chapter 16Acid-Base Equilibria

Troy WoodUniversity of BuffaloBuffalo, NY 2006, Prentice Hall

Page 2: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Is NH3 an acid, base, or could it be both?

1. Acid

2. Base

3. Both

Page 3: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Correct Answer:

In this chapter we learned that a more general definition for a base is a substance that can accept another proton, which is true for NH3 because of the lone electron pair on the N atom.

1. Acid

2. Base

3. Both

Page 4: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Is H2O an acid, base, or could it be both?

1. Acid

2. Base

3. Both

Page 5: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Correct Answer:

As indicated in the equilibrium below, water is an amphoteric substance that can either accept another proton or donate a proton.

OHH

H OHH

OHH+ H+

+

_

1. Acid

2. Base

3. Both

Page 6: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Is the ion PO43 an acid, base, or could it

be both?

-P

O

-O

O-

O- P

O-

-O

O-

O+

1. Acid

2. Base

3. Both

Page 7: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Correct Answer:

Phosphate is a proton acceptor, regardless of which resonance structure is being considered.

1. Acid

2. Base

3. Both

-P

O

-O

O-

O- P

O-

-O

O-

O+

Page 8: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

What is the approximate pH of an aqueous solution of 1 1012 M HCl?

1. 22. 7 3. 124. 145. None of the above

Page 9: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Correct Answer:

This is an aqueous solution, therefore water will autoionize. The concentration of protons due to autoionization of water will dominate that of such a dilute strong acid.

1. 22. 7 3. 124. 145. None of the above

Page 10: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

What is [H+] in an aqueous solution whose pH = 3.72?

1. 1.9 103 M2. 5.1 103 M3. 1.9 104 M4. 5.1 104 M5. 5.1 1010 M

Page 11: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Correct Answer:

3.72 = log[H+]

3.72 = log[H+]

[H+] = 1.9 10 4 M

1. 1.9 103 M2. 5.1 103 M3. 1.9 104 M4. 5.1 104 M5. 5.1 1010 M

Page 12: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

What is the pH of an aqueous solution of [OH] = 6.0 103 M?

1. 2.222. 3.223. 7.004. 10.785. 11.78

Page 13: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Correct Answer:

There is more than one method to solve this problem. One is presented below:

pOH = log(6.0 103)

= 2.22

pH = 14.00 pOH

= 14.00 2.22

= 11.78

1. 2.222. 3.223. 7.004. 10.785. 11.78

Page 14: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

The [H+] in an 0.020 M solution of HNO2 is 3.0 103 M. What is the Ka of HNO2?

1. 4.5 104

2. 6.0 105

3. 9.0 106

4. 1.5 101 5. None of the

above

N

OHO

nitrous acid

Page 15: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Correct Answer:

[HA]

]][A[H

aK

0.020

109.0

0.020

]10[3.0 623

aK

4104.5 aK

1. 4.5 104

• 6.0 105

• 9.0 106

• 1.5 101 • None of the

above

Page 16: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

The pH of a 0.050 M weak acid is 3.00. What is the percentage ionization?

1. 0.10%2. 0.20% 3. 1.0%4. 2.0%5. 3.0%

Page 17: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Correct Answer:

100%[HA]

][Hionization %

eq

o

100%[0.050]

]10[1.0ionization %

-3

2.0%ionization %

Since pH = 3.00,

[H+] = 1.0 103 M, so 1. 0.10%2. 0.20% 3. 1.0%4. 2.0%5. 3.0%

Page 18: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

For a certain weak acid, Ka = 2.0 105. What is Kb for its conjugate base?

1. 4.5 103

2. 5.0 103

3. 1.0 109

4. 4.0 1010

5. 5.0 1010

Page 19: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Correct Answer:

wba KKK

a

wb K

KK

10

5-

-14

105.0102.0

101.0

bK

1. 4.5 103

2. 5.0 103

3. 1.0 109

4. 4.0 1010

5. 5.0 1010

Page 20: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Which of the following oxyacid species is the strongest acid?

1. HClO2. HClO2

3. HClO3

4. HClO4

Page 21: Chapter 16 Acid-Base Equilibria

Correct Answer:

For oxyacids that have the same central atom Y, acid strength increases as the number of O atoms bound to Y increases.

Thus, HClO4 is the strongest acid of this series.

1. HClO2. HClO2

3. HClO3

4. HClO4


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