Equilibrium

Alkaline (Base)

Strong bases

Alkali metal hydroxides
(Group one)

Highly soluble in water and high pH

Alkali metal hydroxides
(Group two) Though they have low Ksp

Lower pH and smaller Ksp

[OH-]= 10^-pOH
pOH= -log[Oh-]

Conjugate pairs

Connects acids and bases through the gain and loss of a proton

Ex: H2CO3 → HCO3

Ka*Kb=Kw=10^-14

pKa+pKb at 25 degrees = 14

Stronger acid = weaker conjugate base
Stronger conjugate base = weaker conjugate acid

pH >7

Keq=Kb=[BH+][OH-]/[BOH]

Kb = base disassociation constant

Keq

Affected by delta H and temperature

When Keq>1, the forward reaction is favored
When Keq<1, the reverse reaction is favored

Kf/Kr

[C]^c[D]^d/[A]^a[B]^b

Ice tables(concentrations at EQ)

Used to solve for x, using stoichiometry.

phase equilibrium

When [P] and [R] stabilize, equilibrium is reached

Easier in a closed system

Dynamic equilibrium

Forward and reverse actions are constant
Reactions re reversible

Le chatelier's principle

When conditions change, eq is changed

Ex: changed in pressure, temperature are counteracted

Temperature speeds up forward and reverse reactions

Pressure lowers, concentration lowers

Ex: gas exchange in the lungs

Due to large amounts of H2O already present, we ignore H2O in Keq expressions, as it will not greatly impact the outcome of concentration.

Ksp

Higher ksp= more soluble
Used on highly insoluble salts

Crystallization of cations and anions.

Dissolution of salt crystals

common ion effect

At Eq, solids stop dissolving

sped up by larger surface area= faster to eq

Hard vs soft water
Kidney stones

Acids

pKa= -log(Ka)

Types

Strong acids

100% disassociation
Ex: HCl, HBr, HI

Weak acids

Can calculate %disassociation... often 1%

pH <7

pH= -log(H3O)
(H3O)=10^-pH

pH+pOH= 14

Keq=Ka= [H3O+][A-]/[HA]

Ka= acid disassociation constant

polyprotic acids

First disassociation has largest Ka

Next disassociation progressively has smaller Ka

Written as HA

Becomes A- when it loses it's hydrogen

Ha+H2O→H3O+ + A-

Acid base titrations
(Weak acid in this example)

Before base is added

Disassociation of weak acid in H2O

Before equivalence point

Excess weak acid

at equivalence point

Weak acid is neutralized, turns into a conjugate base

After equivalence point

Intial [OH-] from excess base

Used to find amounts of acid in a solution through neutralization

ph indicators

If done correctly, the ph indicator will change colour at the equivalence point. If not, it may change too soon, leaving the equivalence point unsolved for.

n acid=n base

CaVa=CbVb

Solution is neutral when this has been achieved

Buffer system

Used to stabilize the pH of a solution

Must require an acid base conjugate pair

pH = pKa of weak acid

Acid added neutralizes the conjugate pair base
Base added neutralized the conjugate pair acid

pKb= -log(kb)

Definitions

Arrhenius base: gives up an OH-

Bronsted-Lowry base: must recieve an H+