Acids and Alkalines

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Steps of ionic bond?

1) Balanced symbol equation ( use state symbols) 2) Write down ions involved and state symbols 3) then anything that is aqueous, seperate into ions 4) cancel out the spectator ions, anything that is on both sides of the equation that are the same 5) you are left with a ionic equation

What is a base?

A base is a proton accepter A base is a substance that can react with acids and neutralise them. Bases are usually: metal oxides, such as copper oxide metal hydroxides, such as sodium hydroxide metal carbonates, such as calcium carbonate Ammonia too ( NH3)

What is neutralization reaction?

A chemical reaction happens if you mix together an acid and a base. The reaction is called neutralisation. A neutral solution is made if you add just the right amount of acid and base together. Neutralisation is an exothermic reaction, so the reaction mixture warms up during the reaction.

What colour does Phenolphthalein turn for acids and alkalines?

Acid: Colourless Alkaline: Pink

What colour does litmus paper turn for acids and alkalines?

Acid: RED Alkaline: BLUE

What colour does universal indicator turn for acids and alkalines?

Acid: Red Alkaline: Purple

What colour does methylorange turn for acids and alakalines?

Acid: Red Alkaline: Yellow/orange

What is an easy way to decide whether a substance is a acid, base or alkali

Alkalis - normally have OH ( Sodium hydroxide, NaOH) Base - Normally just has O ( Lithium oxide, Li2O) Acid - has an acid in the equation (Hydrogen nitrate, HNO3)

What is a alkaline?

An Alkali is a soluble base Any substance that produces OH- (hydroxide ions) in aqueous solution is called alkali.

What is an acid?

An acid is a proton donor

In an aqueous solution what is an acid the source of?

An acid is a source of hydrogen ions (H+) They are proton donors.

In an aqueous solution what is an alkali the source of?

An alkali is the source of hydroxide ions (OH-) is a proton donor and a base is a proton acceptor

What is the formula for Ethanolic acid?

CH3COOH

Hydrogen chloride (g)---->

Dissolved in water ----> Hydrochloric acid (aq)

What is the formula for sulphuric acid?

H2SO4

What is the formula for phosphric acid?

H3PO4

What is the formula for hydrochloric acid?

HCL

What is the formula for Nitric acid?

HN03

What is the experiment that turns an insoluble salt into a pure, dry sample of a soluble salt?

Heat acid (H2SO4) in a beaker. Add base (CuO) until no more copper oxide dissolves and stir with glass rod (This will neutralise all the acid). Filter the mixture using filter paper and funnel to remove any excess copper oxide. Heat the filtered solution (CuSO4) so a hot saturated solution forms. Allow the solution to cool so that hydrated crystals form. Remove the crystals by filtration and wash with distilled water which will remove any impurities. Dry by leaving in a warm place so the water evaporates.

Acid used + salt name ends in...

Hydrochloric acid ---> Chloride Nitric acid --------> Nitrate Sulphuric acid -----> Sulphate Ethanoic acid -------> ethanoate Phosphoric acid -----> phosphate

What is used to distinguish between acid and alkaline?

Litmus Phenolphthalein Methyl orange Universal indicator

Example of metal + acid ----> salt + hydrogen

Magnesium + HCl ----> Magnesium chloride + hydrogen

Example of Acid + metal oxide----> salt + water

Nitric acid + iron oxide ----> iron nitrate + water

Example of Acid + metal carbonate----> salt + water + C02

Phosphoric acid + calcium carbonate ----> calcium phosphate + water + C02

What is a precipitation reaction?

Precipitate/precipitation reaction- making something insoluble from 2 soluble When you mix the 2 soluble solutions together, the Clear soluble solutions together, forms a insoluble solid and a insoluble liquid.

Metal + Acid ----->

Salt + hydrogen

Acid + metal hydroxide ----->

Salt + water

Making insoluble salts

Silver nitrate and sodium chloride are both soluble. When their solutions are mixed together, soluble sodium nitrate and insoluble silver chloride are made: silver nitrate + sodium chloride → sodium nitrate + silver chloride AgNO3(aq) + NaCl(aq) → NaNO3(aq) + AgCl(s) The ionic equation for this process is as follows: Ag+(aq) + Cl-(aq) → AgCl(s)

Example of a precipitation reaction

Sodium carbonate + Magnesium sulphate ----> Sodium sulphate + magnesium carbonate Na2SO4 (aq) + MgSo4 (aq) ------> Na2SO4 (aq) + MgCO3 (s)

What are the solubility rules?

Sodium, potassium, ammonium - soluble Nitrates - soluble Common chlorides/bromides/iodides - Soluble (except Silver chloride, lead chloride) Common sulfates - Soluble (except lead, barium, and calcium sulfate) Common carbonates - Insoluble (except sodium, potassium and ammonium ones) Common hydroxide - Insoluble (except sodium, potassium and calcium ones)

Example of Acid + metal hydroxide ----> salt + water

Sulphuric acid + lithium hydroxide ----> lithium sulfate + water

What is the reaction between an acid and a base/ alkali?

The reaction is called neutralisation. (Acid-base reaction). H+(aq) + OH-(aq) → H2O(l) The reaction is seen as a proton transfer.The acid donates protons which are then accepted by the base. Acid - proton donor Base - proton accept-or

Difference between titration and precipitation reaction

Titration -> How much acid is used to neutrilise an alkaline Precipitation reactoin -> making an insoluble with 2 soluble solutions

What is solubility?

a solute's capability of being dissolved

When something is soluble, the state symbol is...

aq

metal oxides, metal hydroxides and ammonia can act as.....

bases

An acid isn't an acid until it is

dissolved in water

How to use the pH scale?

from 0-14, can be used to classify solutions as strongly acidic (0-3) weakly acidic (4-6) neutral (7) weakly alkaline (8-10) strongly alkaline (11-14)

What is a saturated solution?

max amount of solute, no longer dissolves

Alkalines _______ acids

neutralise

Acid + metal oxide ------>

salt + water

Acid + metal carbonate------->

salt + water + Carbon dioxide

What is the difference between strong and weak acid/alkali

strong acid/alkali - fully ionised when dissolved in water weak acid/alkali - only very slightly ionised when dissolved in water


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