Acids 1

Description

Flashcards on Acids 1, created by I Shouldn't be awake on 15/04/2018.
I Shouldn't be awake
Flashcards by I Shouldn't be awake, updated more than 1 year ago
I Shouldn't be awake
Created by I Shouldn't be awake over 6 years ago
3
0

Resource summary

Question Answer
Strong acid Completely dissociates Gives up all its H atoms as H+ HCl -> H+ + Cl- The chlorine keeps the electron
Why is H+ a proton? As the hydrogen atom has lost its electron and so effectively consists of just a single proton
Weak acid Only gives up a proportion of its H atoms as H+
Why is ethanoic acid weak? As it only gives up the hydrogen from its COOH group, proffering just a meager proportion of its hydrogens
Why is the hydroxide ion negative? As the H atom absconds, it leaves behind its electron to the mother O-H complex
What is a base Bases neutralise acids to form a salt Mop up loose charged atoms
Alkali soluble base that dissolves in water to release a hydroxide ion.
What replaces the H+ ion? Metal or NH4+ ions from the base.
Sulfuric acid Only one of its H+ ions is a strong acid SO4- readily reassociates with protons to form HSO4- and so is weak.
What is the typical burette measurement read to? +/- 0.05cm3 So reading ALWAYS has 2 decimal places
What is the criteria for concordant results? Agreeing to within 0.10cm3 of each other
how do you work out mean titre? add + divide by 'n'.
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

01 Long Term causes of the French Revolution
Holly Lovering
Economics
Emily Fenton
Conceptos Generales De Robótica
fede ramos
CITAÇÕES DE GRANDES FILÓSOFOS
miminoma
History- Religion and medicine
gemma.bell
Latin Literature Exam Techniques
mouldybiscuit
Teaching students to be digitally literate
Micheal Heffernan
Test your English grammar skills
Brad Hegarty
2PR101 1.test - 10. část
Nikola Truong
1PR101 2.test - Část 16.
Nikola Truong
1PR101 2.test - Část 18.
Nikola Truong