Download TYPES OF SOLUTION CHEMICAL REACTIONS

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Depletion force wikipedia , lookup

Transition state theory wikipedia , lookup

Hydrogen-bond catalysis wikipedia , lookup

History of electrochemistry wikipedia , lookup

Click chemistry wikipedia , lookup

Redox wikipedia , lookup

Bioorthogonal chemistry wikipedia , lookup

Chemical reaction wikipedia , lookup

Acid rain wikipedia , lookup

Crystallization wikipedia , lookup

Electrochemistry wikipedia , lookup

Spinodal decomposition wikipedia , lookup

Rate equation wikipedia , lookup

Size-exclusion chromatography wikipedia , lookup

Debye–Hückel equation wikipedia , lookup

Chemical equilibrium wikipedia , lookup

Liquid–liquid extraction wikipedia , lookup

Determination of equilibrium constants wikipedia , lookup

Nucleophilic acyl substitution wikipedia , lookup

Lewis acid catalysis wikipedia , lookup

Sodium hydroxide wikipedia , lookup

Equilibrium chemistry wikipedia , lookup

Strychnine total synthesis wikipedia , lookup

Sodium hypochlorite wikipedia , lookup

Electrolysis of water wikipedia , lookup

Stoichiometry wikipedia , lookup

Nanofluidic circuitry wikipedia , lookup

Stability constants of complexes wikipedia , lookup

Acid wikipedia , lookup

Acid dissociation constant wikipedia , lookup

Hydroxide wikipedia , lookup

Acid–base reaction wikipedia , lookup

PH wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
TYPES OF SOLUTION CHEMICAL REACTIONS
ACID-BASE REACTIONS
1. Acid- Any compound that upon reacting in aqueous solution, produces a H+, a proton.
Base- Any compound that upon reacting in aqueous solution, accepts a H+, a proton.
2. Neutralization Reaction- when an acid and a base are mixed. T
a. Acid + Base  Salt + H2O
i. HCl(aq) + NaOH (aq)  NaCl + H2O
b. The net ionic equation will be :
ii. H+(aq) + OH-(aq)  H2O
Exercise ?? – I made this up.
Write a balanced molecular equation for the reaction between aqueous solutions of acetic acid
(CH3COOH) and barium hydroxide (figure out the formula).
3. Neutralization Reaction Stoichiometric Calculations
A. Steps for Success
1. Write the balanced net ionic equation for the reaction.
2. Calculate the moles of each reactant.
3. Determine which reactant is limiting.
4. Calculate the moles of products formed by limiting reactant.
5. Convert to grams or volume as needed
Exercise 12
What volume of a 0.100 M HC1 solution is needed to neutralize 25.0 mL of 0.350 M NaOH ?
8.75 x10-2 L (87.5 mL)
Exercise 13
In a certain experiment, 28.0 mL of 0.250 M HNO3 and 53.0 mL of 0.320 M KOH are mixed.
Calculate the amount of water formed in the resulting reaction. What is the concentration of H+
or OH- ions in excess after the reaction goes to completion ?
0.123 M OH-
4. Acid-Base Titrations
a. Volumetric analysis—a technique for determining the amount of a certain substance
by doing a titration (controlled mixing) between an acid and a base.
b. titrant—the standard solution of known concentration whose volume is accurately
delivered from a buret.
c. analyte—the substance being analyzed; with a known formula, mass or volumed. indicator- a substance added at the beginning of a titration that changes colors.
5. Procedure for titration
a. A standard solution of an acid or base is loaded into a buret.
b. The unknown solution of known volume is placed in an Erlenmeyer flask below the buret.
c. An indicator is added to the unknown.
d. Small amounts of the standard solution is added until the endpoint is reached and a color
change occurs.
6. Terms:
a. endpoint- the point (volume of standard) at which the unknown changes color
b. equivalence point--# moles of standard solution = # moles of unknown solution.
c. standardize- titration the unknown solution with the standard of known concentration.
Exercise 14
A student carries out an experiment to standardize (determine the exact concentration of) a
sodium hydroxide solution. To do this the student weighs out a 1.3009-g sample of potassium
hydrogen phthalate (KHC8H4O4, often abbreviated KHP). KHP (molar mass 204.22 g/mol) has
one acidic hydrogen. The student dissolves the KHP in distilled water, adds phenolphthalein as
an indicator, and titrates the resulting solution with the sodium hydroxide solution to the
phenolphthalein endpoint. The difference between the final and initial buret readings indicates
that 41.20 mL of the sodium hydroxide solution is required to react exactly with the 1.3009 g
KHP. Calculate the concentration of the sodium hydroxide solution.
0.1546 M
Exercise 15
An environmental chemist analyzed the effluent (the released waste material) from an industrial
process known to produce the compounds carbon tetrachloride (CC14) and benzoic acid
(HC7H5O2), a weak acid that has one acidic hydrogen atom per molecule. A sample of this
effluent weighing 0.3518 g was shaken with water, and the resulting aqueous solution required
10.59 mL of 0.1546 M NaOH for neutralization. Calculate the mass percent of HC7H5O2 in the
original sample.