Acids, Bases, and Salts
Acids, bases, and salts are everywhere in nature! 🍋 For example:
- Hydrochloric acid (HCl) in your stomach helps digestion.
- Vinegar contains acetic acid.
- Lemon juice has citric acid, and tamarind has tartaric acid.
Properties of Acids & Bases
- Acids taste sour, turn blue litmus → red, and release H₂ gas with metals.
- Bases taste bitter, turn red litmus → blue, and feel soapy (e.g., washing soda).
- Mixing acids and bases gives salts (e.g., NaCl from HCl + NaOH).
Salts Dissolving in Water
Salts like NaCl split into ions (Na⁺ and Cl⁻) in water. Water’s high dielectric constant (80) weakens the electrostatic forces between ions, letting them move freely 💧→⚡.
Three Ways to Define Acids & Bases
1. Arrhenius Concept (Water-Based)
- Acid: Releases H⁺(aq) ions in water.
Example: HCl → H⁺ + Cl⁻ or HCl + H₂O → H₃O⁺ + Cl⁻ - Base: Releases OH⁻(aq) ions.
Example: NaOH → Na⁺ + OH⁻ - ⚠️ Limitation: Only works in water. Can’t explain bases like ammonia (NH₃) that lack OH⁻ groups.
2. Brønsted-Lowry Concept (Proton Transfer)
- Acid: Donates a proton (H⁺).
Base: Accepts a proton (H⁺). - Example: NH₃ + H₂O ⇌ NH₄⁺ + OH⁻
Here, H₂O (acid) gives H⁺ to NH₃ (base). - Conjugate Pairs:
- After donating H⁺, an acid becomes its conjugate base.
- After accepting H⁺, a base becomes its conjugate acid.
- Example: In HCl + H₂O → H₃O⁺ + Cl⁻, Cl⁻ is conjugate base of HCl, H₃O⁺ is conjugate acid of H₂O.
3. Lewis Concept (Electron Pairs)
- Acid: Accepts an electron pair (e.g., BF₃).
- Base: Donates an electron pair (e.g., NH₃).
- Example: BF₃ + :NH₃ → BF₃NH₃ (BF₃ accepts : from NH₃).
Strong vs. Weak Acids/Bases
- Strong acids (HCl, HNO₃, H₂SO₄) ionize completely in water → good H⁺ donors.
- Strong bases (NaOH, KOH) ionize completely → good OH⁻ donors.
- Weak acids (e.g., acetic acid) partially ionize (<5%). Their dissociation is an equilibrium:
HA(aq) + H₂O(l) ⇌ H₃O⁺(aq) + A⁻(aq) - In equilibrium, the reaction favors the side with the weaker acid.
NEET Important Concepts 🔥
- Conjugate Acid-Base Pairs (e.g., H₂O/OH⁻, NH₄⁺/NH₃).
- Amphoteric Species (substances that act as both acid AND base, like H₂O, HCO₃⁻).
- Lewis Acids/Bases (electron pair acceptors/donors, e.g., BF₃, NH₃).
- Strength of Acids/Bases: Strong acids completely dissociate; weak acids establish equilibrium.
Quick Practice Problems
Q: Conjugate base of HF? A: F⁻
Q: Conjugate acid of NH₃? A: NH₄⁺
Q: Why is BCl₃ a Lewis acid? A: It accepts electron pairs (e.g., from NH₃).