7A
strong acids
HCl, HBr, HI, HNO3, H2SO4, HClO4, HClO3
HNO3
strong electrolyte
Steps for Metathesis reactions
1) Use the chemical formulas of the reactants to determine which ions are present. 2) Write formulas for the products: cation from one reactant, anion from the other. Use charges to write proper subscripts. 3) Check your solubility rules. If either product is insoluble, a precipitate forms. 4) Balance the equation.
If you have an aqueous solution that contains 1.5 moles of HCl, how many moles of ions are in the solution?
3 moles
Solution
A homogeneous mixture of two or more substances
Predict the identity of the precipitate that forms when aqueous solutions of BaCl2 and K2SO4 are mixed.
BaSO4
Which solute will cause the light bulb in the previous slide to glow most brightly, CH3OH, NaOH, or HC2H3O2? Why?
CH3OH is not an electrolyte NaOH is a strong electrolyte (this one) HC2H3O2 is a weak electrolyte
What compound precipitates when aqueous solutions of Fe2(SO4)3 and LiOH are mixed?
Fe(OH)3
Metathesis Reactions
It appears as though the ions in the reactant compounds exchange, or transpose, ions Ex. AgNO3(aq) + KCl(aq) ⎯→ AgCl(s) + KNO3(aq)
strong bases
LiOH, NaOH, KOH, RbOH, CsOH, Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, Ba(OH)2
C2H5OH
nonelectrolyte
What are the 3 ways to write a metathesis reaction
Molecular equation Complete ionic equation Net ionic equation
Gas Forming reactions
Substances other than hydroxide containing compounds can react with the hydrogen cations (H+) in acids to form insoluble compounds in the gaseous state.
If you were to draw diagrams representing aqueous solutions of (a) NiSO4, (b) Ca(NO3)2, (c) Na3PO4, (d) Al2(SO4)3, how many anions would you show if each diagram contained six cations?
a) 6 b) 12 c) 12 d) 9
dissociate
When an ionic substance dissolves in water, the solvent pulls the individual ions from the crystal and solvates them.
precipitate
When two solutions containing soluble salts are mixed, sometimes an insoluble salt will be produced. A salt "falls" out of solution
Diprotic acids
Yield two H+ per molecule of acid (H2SO4)
Electrolyte
a substance that dissociates into ions when dissolved in water
What dissolved species are present in a solution of KCN? CCl4? NaClO4?
a) KCN -> K+ + CN- b) CCl4 -> individual CCl4 c) NaClO4 -> Na+ + ClO4-
NH3
accepts an H+ ion from water molecule and thereby produces an OH- ion Ammonia is a weak electrolyte because only about 1% of the NH3 forms NH4+ and OH-
organic acids
acidic hydrogen is the one that is attached to the oxygen in the -COOH functional group, aka carboxyl group. weak and do not ionize completely
complete (total) ionic equation
all strong electrolytes (strong acids, strong bases, and soluble ionic salts) are dissociated into their ions. Ex. Ag+(aq) + NO3−(aq) + K+(aq) + Cl−(aq) ⎯→ AgCl(s) + K+(aq) + NO3−(aq)
Solutes
are dissolved in the substance
strong electrolyte
dissociates completely when dissolved in water (ionic compounds, strong acids/bases)
carbonates/bicarbonates with acids
form CO2 (g), H2O (l), and an ionic salt Ex. Molecular: CaCO3(s) + 2 HCl(aq) ⎯→CaCl2(aq) + CO2(g) + H2O(l) Net:CaCO3(s) + 2H+(aq) ⎯→ Ca2+ + CO2(g) + H2O(l)
Ammonia with bases
form NH3(g), H2O (l), and an ionic salt. ex. Molecular Equation: NH4Cl + NaOH → NaCl + NH3 (g) + H2O(l) Net Ionic Equation: NH4+ (aq) + OH- (aq) → NH3 (g) + H2O(l)
Sulfites/bisulfite with acid
form SO2 (g), H2O (l), and an ionic salt Ex. Molecular Equation: Na2SO3 (aq) + 2 HCl(aq) → 2 NaCl (aq) + SO2(g) + H2O(l) Net Ionic Equation: SO32- (aq) + 2 H+ (aq) → SO2 (g) + H2O(l)
Write the net ionic equation for the precipitation reaction that occurs when aqueous solutions of silver nitrate and potassium phosphate are mixed. Which ions remain in solution, unreacted, after solutions potassium carbonate and magnesium sulfate are mixed? Separate samples of a solution of an unknown salt are treated with dilute solutions of HBr, H2SO4, and NaOH. A precipitate forms in all three cases. Which of the following cations could be present in the unknown salt solution: K+, Pb2+, Ba2+?
idk man
Organic acid example: CH3COOH
leaving CH3COO- (acetate ion) and H+
nonelectrolyte
may dissolve in water, but it does not dissociate into ions when added to water (instead it breaks into individual molecules or atoms)
COOH
means its an acid
Will a precipitate form when solutions of Ba(NO3)2 and KOH are mixed?
no
Write the net ionic equation for the precipitation reaction that occurs when aqueous solutions of calcium chloride and sodium carbonate are mixed.
notes
weak electrolyte
only dissociates partially when dissolved in water (weak acids and bases).
Solvent
present in the greatest abundance (does the dissolving)
bases Bronsted Lowry
proton acceptor
Acid (Bronsted-Lowry)
proton donor
Metal suflide with acid
salt and H2S ex. Molecular: Na2S(aq) + 2 HCl(aq) → 2 NaCl(aq) + H2S(g) Net: 2 H+ (aq) + S2- (aq) → H2S(g)
Net Ionic equation
show only the soluble, strong electrolytes (represented by ions) and omit the spectator ions, which go through the reaction unchanged ex. Ag+(aq) + NO3−(aq) + K+(aq) + Cl−(aq) ⎯→ AgCl(s) + K+(aq) + NO3−(aq) Ag+(aq) + Cl−(aq) ⎯→ AgCl(s)
CaCl2
strong electrolyte
Acid (Arrhenius)
substances that increase the concentration of H+ when dissolved in water
Bases (Arrhenius)
substances that increase the concentration of OH- when dissolved in water
Although H2SO4 is a strong electrolyte, (ASK WHYYYYY)
sulfuric acid contain a mixture of H+, HSO4-, and SO42
acid-base reaction (aka neutralization reaction)
the acid donates a proton (H+) to the base
aq
the ions are dissacioted
spectator ions
the ions crossed out
When the base is a metal hydroxide
water and a salt (an ionic compound) are produced in an acid base reaction
Aqueous solution
when water is the solvent
Monoprotic acids
yield one H+ per molecule of acid (ex. HNO3, HCl)