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Acids, Bases, and Salts

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Chapter 17 builds a strong foundation in acid-base theory, beginning with Brønsted–Lowry acid-base definitions and identifying conjugate acid-base pairs in reactions. It then connects molecular structure to acid strength, explaining how bond strength and polarity affect acidity in hydrohalic acids and oxoacids, with trends based on electronegativity and oxidation number. You'll also learn the properties of amphoteric substances and the autoionization of water, leading into mastery of the pH and pOH scales, how they interrelate, and how to convert between pH and ion concentrations. The chapter outlines the strong acids and strong bases to memorize, as well as techniques for calculating pH of weak acid solutions using ICE tables and Ka values. It concludes with percent ionization, pH-based problem solving, and an introduction to acid-base indicators. These notes are packed with clear examples, key formulas, and test-ready practice for students aiming to master acid-base chemistry for quizzes, exams, and the ACS final.

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Uploaded on
June 23, 2025
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Written in
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Susan michael
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Chapter 17 – Acids, Bases, and Salts
Section 17.1 – Brønsted Acids and Bases

What is a Brønsted acid? a substance that can donate a
proton

What is a Brønsted base? a substance that can accept a proton

What is a conjugate base of an acid? The anion that remains after a bronsted acid donates a proton

What is a conjugate acid of a base? The cation that results when a bronsted base accepts a
proton

In the following reaction, identify each reactant as a Brønsted acid or Brønsted base. Then,

>
loses
identify the conjugate acid-base pairs. a
proton
gains
a
proton
- -
H2SO4 (aq) + OH– (aq) → H2O (l) + HSO4– (aq)

acid base cacid c .
base



Work through Worked Example 17.1 and 17.2. Once you understand the steps needed to
solve this type of problem, challenge yourself with the 3 Practice Problems (Attempt, Build,
Conceptualize).

Q1: List the conjugate acids for each of the following:

H3Ot
H2O _____________ HzPOy
HPO42− ________________ HBr
Br- _________________

Q2: List the conjugate bases for each of the following:

OH-
H2O _____________ POp-
HPO4-2 ________________ CHsNH2
CH3NH3+ _________________



Section 17.2 – Molecular Structure and Acid Strength

The strength of an acid is measure by ____________________________________________.
it's ability to ionize


strength of the H-X bond
The two factors that influence the strength of an acid HX is (1) the _________
and (2) the __________
polarity of the H-X bond.
1. The stronger the H-X bond, the _________
weaker the acid.
2. The more polar the H-X bond, the __________
stronger the acid.
·



polarity & strength are directly related
·
bond strength & acid strength are inversely related

1

, What are hydrohalic acids? Halogens that form a series of binary acids (HF HC) HBr , and
, ,
HI)
The predominant factor in determining the strength of the hydrohalic acids is the
bond strength
____________.

List the hydrohalic acids in order of increasing acid strength:


H-F < H-CI < H-Br < H-I
weakest
strongest
What are oxoacids? What atom is the H+ bonded to in all oxoacids?
contain hydrogen oxygen and
, ,
a central nonmetal atom

0-H


Comparing oxoacid strength:

1. When comparing oxoacids with different central atoms that are from the same group of the
periodic table and that have the same oxidation number (i.e. same # of oxygen atoms): acid
strength increases with increasing _________________
electronegativity of the central atom.
CI is more electronegative than Br.

• HClO3 is a stronger acid than HBrO3 for this reason. Do you expect HIO3 to be weaker or
stronger than HBrO3? H10z will be a weaker acid than HBrOs because H10z has
less electronegative central atom (1) than HBrOs (Br) .
Br is more electronegative.

2. When comparing oxoacids with the same central atom but different numbers of oxygen
atoms: acid strength increases as the central atom’s oxidation number (# of oxygen atoms)
_______________.
increases

the stronger the acid .
The more oxygen atoms ,




Work through Worked Example 17.3. Once you understand the steps needed to solve this type
of problem, challenge yourself with the 3 Practice Problems (Attempt, Build, Conceptualize).
Predict the relative strengths of the oxoacids in each of the following groups :




(a) HCIO and HBrO and (b)
HNOz and HNOz
-

(a) HCIO is stronger than HBrO because they have the same oxidation I , so we look at the
electronegativities of the central atom.
Since CI is more electronegative than Br ,
HCIO is the stronger acid

(b) HNOz is stronger than HNO2 because it has the
higher oxidation #.



2

, Section 17.3 – The Acid-Base Properties of Water

What is an amphoteric substance?
An oxide that shows both acidic & basic acid base)
properties (can be both an or a




Complete the chemical equation below to show how two water molecules react. This is known
as the autoionization of water. Label the conjugate acid and the conjugate base.

Off- +
HzOT
c .
base c .
acid


Kw = [ Hz0t ] × [ ] = 1.0 x 10-14 at 25 °C
-




OH



Note that in ALL aqueous solutions, both H3O+ and OH– are present.

What is [H3O+] and [OH−] in pure water at 25°C?

if (H30 ] [OH-]
+
=
1 .
0x10-l CHgO ]
+
=
1 .
0x10" & [OH-] =
1 0
.
x 10

Work through Worked Example 17.4. Once you understand the steps needed to solve this type
of problem, challenge yourself with the 3 Practice Problems (Attempt, Build, Conceptualize).



Section 17.4 – The pH and pOH Scales

Describe how pH and pOH are defined and how the quantities are related.

log [H30 ] log [OH -] 14
+
pH = -




pOH = -


pH + pOH = _______ @ 25°C

Rewrite the equations for pH and pOH above to solve for [H3O+] or [OH−]:

I
1 0 x10-14
[H3O+] = [OH−] =
.




[H30 ]
+




Complete the table below to describe aqueous solutions.

Classification Relative ion concentration pH at 25 °C

Acidic [ItzO ]
+
> COH-] more acid pH < 7
Neutral [H3O+] = [OH–] pH =
7

Basic [HzO ]
+
< [OH] more base
pH > 7




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