Chapter 02 - 2015
Chapter 02 - 2015
Chapter 02 - 2015
# Quizes
3/23 (Mon): Chapter 2 and 3
4/6 (Mon): Chapter 4 and 5
CHAPTER 2
Water and Aqueous Solutions
Learning goals:
Hydrogen Bonds
Strong dipole-dipole or charge-dipole interaction that arises
between an acid (proton donor) and a base (proton acceptor)
Typically 46 kJ/mol for bonds with neutral atoms,
Q: magnitude of charge
: dielectric constant
r: the distance between charged groups
For water, at 25 C, = 78.5: weak ionic interaction
For benzene, = 4.6 : strong ionic interaction
Ionic attractions or repulsion operate only over short distances
Biochemical Significance of
van der Waals Interactions
Weak individually
easily broken, reversible
Universal
occur between any two atoms that are near each other
Importance
determines steric complementarity
stabilizes biological macromolecules (stacking in DNA)
facilitates binding of polarizable ligands
Noncolligative Properties
Viscosity, surface tension, taste, and color
Depend on the chemical nature of the solute
Osmotic Pressure
Ionization of Water
H+ + OHH2O
O-H bonds are polar and can dissociate heterolytically
Proton Hydration
Protons do not exist free in solution.
They are immediately hydrated to form hydronium ons.
A hydronium ion is a water molecule with a proton associated with
one of the non-bonding electron pairs.
Hydronium ions are solvated by nearby water molecules.
The covalent and hydrogen bonds are interchangeable. This
allows for an extremely fast mobility of protons in water via
proton hopping.
Proton Hopping
Ionization of Water:
Quantitative Treatment
Concentrations of participating species in an equilibrium process
are not independent but are related via the equilibrium constant:
+][OH-]
[H
H+ + OHH2O
Keq =
[H2O]
Keq can be determined experimentally, it is 1.81016 M at 25C.
[H2O] can be determined from water density, it is 55.5 M.
Keq =
[H+][OH-]
[H2O]
Keq =
[H+][OH-]
[55.5 M]
at 25C
Neutral pH:
equal amount of [H+] and [OH-] as in pure water.
[H+] = [OH-] = 10-7 M
What is pH?
pH = -log[H+]
pH scale is logarithmic:
1 unit = 10-fold
+ H2O
Keq
H3C
OH
+ H3O+
O-
K a K eq [H 2 O]
[H ][CH3COO- ]
Ka
1.74 10 5 M
[CH3COOH]
[H ] Ka
[CH3COOH]
[CH3COO ]
pKa=6.0
at pH = pKa
Buffering capacity is lost when the pH differs from
HendersonHasselbalch Equation:
Derivation
[H ][A - ]
Ka
[HA]
HA
H+ + A-
[HA]
[H ] K a
[A - ]
+
[HA]
- log[H ] -logK a log
[A-]
-
[A ]
pH pK a log
[HA]
Chapter 2: Summary
In this chapter, we learned about:
The nature of intermolecular forces
The properties and structure of liquid water
The behavior of weak acids and bases in water