Arrhenius theory of acids and bases
-acidic substances dissociated in aqueous solution’s produce hydrogen ions.
- basic substance dissociated in aqueous solutions produce hydroxide ions.
Bronsted Lowry acid and bases
-acid is a hydrogen ion (proton) donor
-base is a hydrogen ion (proton) acceptor
amphiprotic substances
substances are capable of both accepting and donating a proton depending on the reaction conditions. water is amphiprotic.
amphoteric substances
a broader term used to describe substances which can react as acids or bases.
typical properties of aqueous solutions of acids.
common acids
-hydrogen chloride
- hydrogen nitrite
-hydrogen nitrate
-dihydrogen sulphite
-dihydrogen sulphate
-dihydrogen carbonate
-hydrogen chlorite
-hydrogen chlorate
-dihydrogen phosphate
-ethanoic acid
reactions of acids
acid + bases = salt +water
acid +metal = salt +
hydrogen
acid +carbonate = salt + water + carbon dioxide
acid + hydrogen carbonate = salt +water +carbon dioxide
typical properties of aqueous solutions of bases
strong acid
Weak acid
partially ionise in solution
-acetic acid (ethanoic acid)
-carbonic acid
-hydrogen carbonate
-if the reaction has a
(⇌) it is a weak acid . as the substance does not completely react with the conjugate base. this is an example of an equilibrium mixture where the solution contains comparable amount of reactants and products.
strong base
a strong bases completley accepts a hydrogen ion\
include: OH- and O2-
weak bases
partially ionnise in water to produce hydroxide ions,
include: ammonia, ethylamine, and carbonate ion.
PH of rain water
5.6
PH equation
PH= -log [H3O+]
[H3O+] = 10-ph
ionic product constant
Kw= [H3O+] x [OH-} = 10-14 mol^2 dm ^-6 at 25 C
acid depostion
a borad term which refers to anhy precipitation from the atmosphere which has a pH less than 5.6, thus rainwater is only classified as acid rain if its pH drops below 5.6
wet acid depoistion
-acidified rain, hail, snow, fog, mist
Dry acid depoisition
acid producing gases trapped in smoke, ash and other particulates which fall to the ground and form acidic solutions in water.
minimise acid depoisition
-due to SO2
pre combustion: removal of sulfur containing contaminants
post combustion: neturalisation of SO2 by reactions with a bases
Oxides of nitrogen
-reaction does not occur readily between N and O gas, one natural source is lighting strikes, fossil fueled vehicles and vehicles internal combustion engines.
Effects of acid depoisition
reducing sulfur dioxide emissions.
- pre
-large proportion of emissions come from electricity generated using coal. this can be reduced by using coal with a lower sulfur content or crushing and washing coal to remove metal sulphides. also removed from petroleum products through the process of hydrodesulfurization which is a catalytic process which involves the reaction of sulfur with hydrogen gas to form hydrogen sulfur.
reducing sulfur dioxide -post
flue-gas desulfurisation- a method used to remove sulfur dioxide from the flue gases from fossil fuels electricity plants. the flue gases are passed through a slurry of calcium carbonate to produce calcium sulfite/
reducing oxides of nitrogen emissions
-the addition of catalytic converters to vehicles has significantly reduced the emissions of NO