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Aqueous Solutions and Solubility Equilibria. Chapter 9. 9.1 The Acid-Base Properties of Salt Solutions. Salt: any ionic compound that is formed in a neutralization reaction from the anion of an acid and the cation of a base. E.g. HCl ( aq ) + NaOH ( aq ) → NaCl ( aq ) + H 2 O(l).
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9.1 The Acid-Base Properties of Salt Solutions • Salt: any ionic compound that is formed in a neutralization reaction from the anion of an acid and the cation of a base. E.g. HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) → NaCl(aq) + H2O(l)
The acid/base property of a salt results from reactions between water and the dissociated ions of the salt. • Ion that react with water produce a solution with excess H30+ or OH
Salts that form Neutral Solutions • Salts of strong bases and strong acids dissolve in water and form neutral solutions. • The conjugate bases of strong acids are very ___________. • The conjugate acids of strong bases are very ___________. E.g. Neither ion will react with water: too weak!
Salts the Dissolve and form Acidic and Basic Solutions • Salts of weak bases and strong acids dissolve in water and form acidic solutions. • Salts of strong bases and weak acids dissolve in water and form basic solutions. (LOOKING AT THE CONJUGATE ACIDS/BASES!)
Salts of Weak Acids and Bases • Ions in a salt from weak acids and bases BOTH react with water. • Acidity/basicity depends on relative strength of the ions. • Determine which ion is stronger by comparing the Ka and Kb associated with the cation and anion. • If Ka>Kb, acidic. If Kb>Ka, basic.
CLASSWORK/HOMEWORK Read through SP on pg. 423. Make notes. Do PPs 1-3.
Calculating pH at Equivalence • Equivalence point: just enough acid and base have been mixed for complete reaction to occur, with no excess of either reactant. • Acid-base indicator: weak, monoprotic acid. It is in equilibrium between undissociated acid (one colour) and conjugate base (different colour) • End-point: indicator changes colour.
Solubility as an Equilibrium Process • Change in enthalpy, entropy, and temperature determine whether or not a change is favoured. • Same is important to determine how much salt will dissolve.
Change is favoured when G is negative. • When salt dissolves, entropy is increased.
Ex// Barium sulfate crystals in water: As ions enter solution, rate of reverse change, recrystallisation, increases. Eventually, rate of recrystallisation becomes equal to the rate of dissolving.
Solubility Equilibria • Equilibrium exists between the solid ionic compound and its dissociated ions in solution.
Using the Solubility Product Constant • Use the value of Ksp for a compound to determine the concentration of its ions in a saturated solution. • Similar to finding equilibrium amounts using Kc for homogeneous equilibria.
The Common Ion Effect • When ionic compound added to a solution that already contains one of its ions. • Adding a common ion to a solution increases the concentration of that ion in solution • EQUILIBRIUM SHIFTS AAWY FROM THE ION. • Can form precipitates.
9.3Predicting the Formation of a Precipitate The Ion Product: Qsp: expression that is identical to the solubility product constant, but values are not necessarily at equilibrium. (Where have we seen this before?)
E.g. • Adding magnesium sulfateto water. • Initially, all magnesium sulfate dissolves. • Saturation: no more salt will dissolve. • More solid will form.
Calculate Qsp by substituting the conc. Of each ion into the expression.
Using the Ion Product Expression • If Qsp > Ksp, compound will form an ionic compound. • How do we know which ionic compounds are soluble?
Buffers and the Common Ion Effect • A buffer consists of a ________________________ and a ________________________ or vise versa. • Need to consider initial concentration of reactants since homogeneous.