What are Acids and Bases?

Read this text. Pay attention to the dissociation reactions for acids and bases when dissolved in water. Section 4 introduces neutralization reactions, where an acid and a base react together to form a salt (ionic compound) and water. Pay attention to the form of the neutralization reactions, and make sure you can identify the acid, base, and salt in each reaction.

The concepts of an acid, a base, and a salt are very old ones that have undergone several major refinements as chemical science has evolved. Our treatment of the subject at this stage will be mainly conceptual and qualitative, emphasizing the definitions and fundamental ideas associated with acids and bases. We will not cover calculations involving acid-base equilibria in these lessons.


1. What is an Acid?

The term acid was first used in the seventeenth century; it comes from the Latin root ac-, meaning sharp, as in acetum, vinegar. Some early writers suggested that acidic molecules might have sharp corners or spine-like projections that irritate the tongue or skin.

Acids have long been recognized as a distinctive class of compounds whose aqueous solutions exhibit the following properties:

  • A characteristic sour taste (think of lemon juice!);
  • ability to change the color of litmus from blue to red;
  • react with certain metals to produce gaseous H2;
  • react with bases to form a salt and water.

Litmus is a natural dye found in certain lichens. The name is of Scandinavian origin, e.g. lit (color) + mosi (moss) in Icelandic. Litmus test has acquired a meaning that transcends both chemistry and science to denote any kind of test giving a yes/no answer.

How Oxygen Got Mis-Named

The first chemistry-based definition of an acid turned out to be wrong: in 1787, Antoine Lavoisier, as part of his masterful classification of substances, identified the known acids as a separate group of the complex substances (compounds). Their special nature, he postulated, derived from the presence of some common element that embodies the acidity principle, which he named oxygen, derived from the Greek for acid former.

Lavoisier had recently assigned this name to the new gaseous element that Joseph Priestly had discovered a few years earlier as the essential substance that supports combustion. Many combustion products (oxides) do give acidic solutions, and oxygen is in fact present in most acids, so Lavoisier’s mistake is understandable. In 1811 Humphrey Davy showed that muriatic (hydrochloric) acid (which Lavoisier had regarded as an element) does not contain oxygen, but this merely convinced some that chlorine was not an element but an oxygen-containing compound. Although a dozen oxygen-free acids had been discovered by 1830, it was not until about 1840 that the hydrogen theory of acids became generally accepted. By this time, the misnomer oxygen was too well established a name to be changed. The root oxy comes from the Greek word οξνς, which means sour.


2. Acids and the Hydrogen Ion

The key to understanding acids (as well as bases and salts) had to await Michael Faraday’s mid-nineteenth century discovery that solutions of salts (now known as electrolytes) conduct electricity. This implies the existence of charged particles that can migrate under the influence of an electric field. Faraday named these particles ions (wanderers). Later studies on electrolytic solutions suggested that the properties we associate with acids are due to the presence of an excess of hydrogen ions in the solution. By 1890 the Swedish chemist Svante Arrhenius (1859-1927) was able to formulate the first useful theory of acids:

Image of Svante Arrhenius

"an acidic substance is one whose molecular unit contains at least one hydrogen atom that can dissociate, or ionize, when dissolved in water, producing a hydrated hydrogen ion and an anion."

hydrochloric acid HCl → H+(aq) + Cl(aq)
sulfuric acid H2SO4→ H+(aq) + HSO4(aq)
hydrogen sulfite ion HSO3(aq) → H+(aq) + SO32–(aq)
acetic acid H3CCOOH → H+(aq) + H3CCOO(aq)


Strictly speaking, an Arrhenius acid must contain hydrogen. However, there are substances that do not themselves contain hydrogen, but still yield hydrogen ions when dissolved in water; the hydrogen ions come from the water itself, by reaction with the substance. A more useful operational definition of an acid is therefore the following:

An acid is a substance that yields an excess of hydrogen ions when dissolved in water.

There are three important points to understand about hydrogen in acids:

  • Although all Arrhenius acids contain hydrogen, not all hydrogen atoms in a substance are capable of dissociating; thus the –CH3 hydrogens of acetic acid are non-acidic. An important part of knowing chemistry is being able to predict which hydrogen atoms in a substance will be able to dissociate into hydrogen ions.

  • Those hydrogens that do dissociate can do so to different degrees. The strong acids such as HCl and HNO3 are effectively 100% dissociated in solution. Most organic acids, such as acetic acid, are weak; only a small fraction of the acid is dissociated in most solutions. HF and HCN are examples of weak inorganic acids.

  • Acids that possess more than one dissociable hydrogen atom are known as polyprotic acids; H2SO4 and H3PO4 are well-known examples. Intermediate forms such as HPO42–, being capable of both accepting and losing protons, are called ampholytes.

In the following table, ampholyte species acting as acid are shown in bold.

H2SO4
sulfuric acid
HSO4 hydrogen sulfate (bisulfate) ion SO42–
sulfate ion
H2S
hydrosulfuric acid
HS
hydrosulfide ion
S2–
sulfide ion
H3PO4
phosphoric acid
H2PO4
dihydrogen phosphate ion
HPO42–
hydrogen phosphate ion
PO43–
phosphate ion
HOOC-COOH
oxalic acid
HOOC-COO
hydrogen oxalate ion
OOC-COO
oxalate ion

Hydrogen ions cannot exist as actual H+ entities in water, but do not panic! It turns out that chemists still find it convenient to pretend as if they are present, and to show these structures in equations that involve acid-base reactions.

3. What is a Base?

The name base has long been associated with a class of compounds whose aqueous solutions are characterized by:

  • a bitter taste;
  • a soapy feeling when applied to the skin;
  • ability to restore the original blue color of litmus that has been turned red by acids;
  • ability to react with acids to form salts;
  • react with certain metals to produce gaseous H2;

The word alkali is often applied to strong inorganic bases. It is of Arabic origin, from al-kali (the ashes) which refers to the calcined wood ashes that were boiled with water to obtain potash which contains the strong base KOH, used in soap making. The element name potassium and its symbol K (from the Latin kalium) derive from these sources

Just as an acid is a substance that liberates hydrogen ions into solution, a base yields hydroxide ions when dissolved in water:

NaOH(s) → Na+(aq) + OH(aq)

Sodium hydroxide is an Arrhenius base because it contains hydroxide ions. However, other substances which do not contain hydroxide ions can nevertheless produce them by reaction with water, and are therefore also classified as bases. Two classes of such substances are the metal oxides and the hydrogen compounds of certain nonmetals:

Na2O(s) + H2O → [2 NaOH] → 2 Na+(aq) + 2 OH(aq)

NH3 + H2O → NH4+(aq) + OH(aq)

We can therefore define a base as follows:

A base is a substance that yields an excess of hydroxide ions when dissolved in water.

4. Neutralization: the Simplest Acid-Base Reaction

Acids and bases react with one another to yield two products: water, and an ionic compound known as a salt. This kind of reaction is called a neutralization reaction.

Image that shows HCL+NaOH creates NaCl+H20

This molecular equation is convenient to write, but we need to re-cast it as a net ionic equation to reveal what is really going on here when the reaction takes place in water, as is almost always the case.

H+ + Cl + Na+ + OH→ Na+ + Cl + H2O

If we cancel out the ions that appear on both sides (and therefore do not really participate in the reaction), we are left with the net equation

H+(aq) + OH(aq) → H2O [Equation 1]

which is the fundamental process that occurs in all neutralization reactions.

Confirmation that this equation describes all neutralization reactions that take place in water is provided by experiments indicating that no matter what acid and base are combined, all liberate the same amount of heat (57.7 kJ) per mole of H + neutralized.

In the case of a weak acid, or a base that is not very soluble in water, more than one step might be required. For example, a similar reaction can occur between acetic acid and calcium hydroxide to produce calcium acetate:

2 CH3COOH + Ca(OH)2 → CH3COOCa + 2 H2O

If this takes place in aqueous solution, the reaction is really between the very small quantities of H+ and OH resulting from the dissociation of the acid and the dissolution of the base, so the reaction is identical with [Equation 1]:

H+(aq) + OH(aq) → H2O

If, on the other hand, we add solid calcium hydroxide to pure liquid acetic acid, the net reaction would include both reactants in their molecular forms:

2 CH3COOH(l) + Ca(OH)2 (s) → 2 CH3COO + Ca2+ + 2 H2O

The salt that is produced in a neutralization reaction consists simply of the anion and cation that were already present. The salt can be recovered as a solid by evaporating the water.


What You Should Be Able to Do

Make sure you thoroughly understand the following essential concepts that have been presented above.

  • Suggest simple tests you could carry out to determine if an unknown substance is an acid or a base.
  • State the chemical definitions of an acid and a base in terms of their behavior in water.
  • Write the formula of the salt formed when a given acid and base are combined.

 


Source: Stephen Lower, http://www.chem1.com/acad/webtext/acid1/abcon-1.html
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Last modified: Tuesday, November 30, 2021, 10:51 AM