Acids, Bases, and Salts
Subject: Chemistry
Topic: 4
Cambridge Code: 0620 / 0971 / 5070
Acids and Bases
Acid Definition
Arrhenius definition:
- Produces H⁺ ions (hydrogen ions)
- In aqueous solution
- Taste sour
- Turn blue litmus red
Lowry-Brønsted definition:
- Proton (H⁺) donor
Base Definition
Arrhenius definition:
- Produces OH⁻ ions (hydroxide ions)
- In aqueous solution
- Taste bitter
- Slippery
- Turn red litmus blue
Lowry-Brønsted definition:
- Proton (H⁺) acceptor
Common Acids
Strong acids:
- Completely ionize
- HCl, HBr, HI (hydrohalic)
- HNO₃ (nitric)
- H₂SO₄ (sulfuric)
Weak acids:
- Partially ionize
- CH₃COOH (acetic)
- HCO₂H (formic)
- H₂CO₃ (carbonic)
Common Bases
Strong bases:
- Group 1 hydroxides (NaOH, KOH)
- Soluble and ionize completely
Weak bases:
- NH₃ (ammonia)
- Amines
- Partially ionize
pH Scale
pH - Measure of acidity/basicity
Scale:
- pH < 7: Acidic
- pH = 7: Neutral (at 25°C)
- pH > 7: Basic (alkaline)
pH Values
| Solution | pH |
|---|---|
| Stomach acid | 2 |
| Lemon juice | 2.5 |
| Vinegar | 3 |
| Tomato juice | 4 |
| Coffee | 5 |
| Pure water | 7 |
| Sea water | 8.2 |
| Ammonia | 11 |
| Sodium hydroxide | 14 |
Calculating pH
Example: [H⁺] = 10⁻³
- pH = -log(10⁻³) = 3 (acidic)
pOH and Relationship
Indicators
Indicator - Dye that color changes with pH
Common Indicators
Litmus:
- Red: Acidic
- Blue: Alkaline
Methyl orange:
- Red: pH < 3.1
- Orange: pH 3.1-4.4
- Yellow: pH > 4.4
Phenolphthalein:
- Colorless: pH < 8.2
- Pink: pH 8.2-10
- Purple: pH > 10
Universal indicator:
- Range of colors
- Estimates exact pH
Neutralization Reactions
Neutralization - Acid + Base → Salt + Water
Ionic equation:
Salt Formation
Salt - Ionic compound from acid + base
Examples:
- HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H₂O
- H₂SO₄ + 2KOH → K₂SO₄ + 2H₂O
- HNO₃ + NH₃ → NH₄NO₃
Soluble and Insoluble Salts
Soluble salts:
- All alkali salts
- Most chlorides, nitrates
- Most sulfates
Insoluble salts:
- Formed by precipitation
- AgCl, BaSO₄, CaCO₃
Acid-Base Titration
Titration - Analytical technique to find concentration
Equipment
- Burette - Measures volume precisely (0.05 mL)
- Pipette - Measures fixed volume
- Conical flask - Contains sample
- Indicator - Shows endpoint
Procedure
- Pipette fixed volume of acid into conical flask
- Add indicator (3-5 drops)
- Fill burette with alkali (note volume)
- Add alkali from burette, swirl frequently
- Stop when color change occurs (endpoint)
- Note final burette volume
- Repeat until consistent results (concordant)
Volume Calculation
Example: Initial 0.00 mL, Final 25.00 mL
- Volume used = 25.00 mL
Concentration Calculation
From stoichiometry if coefficients ≠ 1:
Buffer Solutions
Buffer - Solution resisting pH change
Components
- Weak acid + salt of its conjugate base
- OR weak base + salt of its conjugate acid
Example: CH₃COOH + CH₃COONa
How it Works
If acid added:
- Conjugate base neutralizes: OH⁻ + H⁺ → H₂O
If base added:
- Weak acid neutralizes: H⁺ + OH⁻ → H₂O
Importance
- Blood pH maintenance (7.35-7.45)
- Laboratory solutions
- Industrial processes
- Food preservation
Key Points
- Acids: H⁺ donors, pH < 7
- Bases: OH⁻ producers or H⁺ acceptors, pH > 7
- pH scale: 0-14
- Neutralization: Acid + Base → Salt + Water
- Indicators: Show pH range
- Titration: Measures concentration
- Buffers: Resist pH change
Practice Questions
- Classify acids/bases as strong/weak
- Calculate pH from [H⁺]
- Predict indicator colors
- Write neutralization equations
- Calculate simple titration
- Explain buffer action
Revision Tips
- Know pH scale clearly
- Learn strong/weak acids/bases
- Know indicator colors
- Practice titration calculations
- Understand buffer concept
- Learn salt formation
- Practice equation writing