Aqueous Equilibrium
Aqueous Equilibrium
Aqueous Equilibrium
1 Neutralization Reactions
2 The Common-Ion Effect
Acid-base reactions play a very important role (pH of lakes, blood, acid
rain (section at end of chapter 15) and also the solubility of salts and
the factors that affect solubility are also of great importance.
1 Neutralization reactions
Usually acids react with bases to produce water and salt:
HBr(aq) + NaOH(aq) -----> NaBr(aq) + H2O
Strong Acid-Strong Base
This is the case illustrated above and the acid/base reaction is called a neutralization.
In the strong acid/strong base case the resulting pH of the final solution is actually 7
(neutral) hence the use of theterm neutralization.
As we will see later, neutralization reactions involving weak acids and/or weak bases
result in non-neutral solutions but the term neutralization is still used.
Since strong acids and bases are totally dissociated in solution the net
ionic equation for the above reaction is:
H2O (l)
H+ (aq) + OH-(aq)
(or
2H2O (l))
To obtain the equilibrium constant for the reaction (not 100% to the right
as before) we add the reactions that give the net ionic equation and
multiply the appropriate K values.
The calculation for the acetic acid/NaOH case is given in the book and
the HF/NaOH case follows:
We want the net ionic eqn.
H2O + F- (aq)
Ka = 3.5 x 10-4
1/Kw = 1 x 10+14
------------------K = Ka / Kw
= 3.5 x 1010
The value of K is still pretty large so the reaction goes mostly to the right.
Add
F-(aq) + H3O+
HF(aq) + H2O
H3O+(aq) + OH-(aq) 2H2O
+ ------------------------------------------------HF(aq) + OH- (aq) H2O + F- (aq)
HF(aq) + OH-(aq)
Specific case
BH+(aq) + H2O
NH4+ (aq) + H2O
Example in text uses ammonia and strong acid, I will use a different weak
base, aniline.
C6H5NH2 (aq) + H2O C6H5NH3+ (aq) + OH-(aq) Kb = 4.3x10-10
(aniline)
H3O+ (aq) + OH-(aq) 2H2O
1/Kw = 1.0x1014
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------C6H5NH2 (aq) + H3O+ (aq) C6H5NH3+ (aq) + H2O
K = Kb / Kw
= 4.3 x 104
Again the neutralization proceeds mostly to the right since K is a pretty large
number (example in book for NH3 + H3O+ is an even bigger number, 109).
If equimolar quantities of the strong acid and weak base are mixed, the
resulting solution will be acidic (pH <7) since the Cl- (from HCl) is a
spectator ion and the C6H5NH3+ ion hydrolyzes in water producing H3O+.
C6H5NH3+ (aq) + H2O
Ka = 1.8x10-5
100% to completion
since the OAc - ion is a common ion , changing [OAc-] from the salt
will affect the position of the equilibrium.
To illustrate the effect of the common ion , we will first calculate the pH of
a solution of HOAc alone with no common ion (no OAc- ion).
Problem #1
What is the pH of a solution made by dissolving
0.25mol of HOAc and making up to 1.00L?
HOAc
Ka = 1.8x10-5
set up table
initial
change
final
[HOAc]
0.25
-x
0.25-x
[H+]
0 (10-7)
+x
x
[OAc -]
0
+x
x
initial
change
final
[HOAc]
0.25
-x
0.25-x
[H+]
0 (10-7)
+x
x
[OAc -]
0.1
+x
0.1+x
Addition of the OAc- ion shifts the acid dissociation reaction back to the
left (Le Chatelier s Principle) which produces less H+ and produces a
less acidic solution as we have seen.