Chemistry Chapter 19

acid dissociation constant (Ka)

the ration of the concentration of the dissociated form of an acid to the undissociated form; stronger acids have larger __ values than weaker acids

acidic solution

any solution in which the hydrogen-ion concentration is greater than the hydroxide-ion concentration

alkaline solution

a basic solution

amphoteric

a substance that can act as both an acid and a base

base dissociation constant (Kb)

the ratio of the concentration of the conjugate acid times the concentration of the hydroxide ion to the concentration of the base

basic solution

any solution in which the hydroxide-ion concentration is greater than the hydrogen-ion concentration

buffer

a solution in which the pH remains relatively constant when small amounts of acid or base are added; a _____ can be either a solution of a weak acid and the salt of a weak acid or the solution of a weak base with the salt of a weak base

buffer capacity

a measure of the amount of acid or base that may be added to a buffer solution before a significant change in pH occurs

conjugate acid

the particle formed when a base gains a hydrogen ion; NH4+ is the _______ of the base NH3

conjugate acid-base pair

two substances that are related by the loss or gain of a single hydrogen ion; ammonia (NH3) and the ammonium ion (NH4+) are a _________

conjugate base

the particle that remains when an acid has donated a hydrogen ion; OH- is the ______ of acid water

diprotic acid

any acid that contains two ionizable protons (hydrogen ions); sulfuric acid (H2SO4) is a ______

end point

the point in a titration at which the indicator changes color

equivalence point

the point in a titration where the number of moles of hydrogen ions equals the number of moles of hydroxide ions

hydronium ion (H30+)

the positive ion formed when a water molecule gains a hydrogen ion

ion-product constant for water (Kw)

the product of the concentrations of hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions in water; (1 X 10^-14 at 25 degrees C)

Lewis acid

any substance that can accept a pair of electrons to form a covalent bond

Lewis base

any substance that can donate a pair of electrons to form a covalent bond

monoprotic acids

any acid that contains one ionizable proton (hydrogen ion); nitric acid (HNO3) is a ______

neutral solution

an aqueous solution in which the concentrations of hydrogen and hydroxide ions are equal; it has a pH of 7.0

neutralization reaction

a reaction in which an acid and a base react in an aqueous solution to produce a salt and water

pH

a number used to denote the hydrogen-ion concentration, or acidity, of a solution; it is the negative logarithm of the hydrogen-ion concentration of a solution

salt hydrolysis

a process in which the cations or anions of a dissociated salt accept hydrogen ions from water or donate hydrogen ions to water

self-ionization

a term describing the reaction in which two water molecules react to produce ions

standard solution

a solution of known concentration used in carrying out a titration

strong acid

an acid that is completely (or almost completely) ionized in aqueous solution

strong base

a base that completely dissociates into metal ions and hydroxide ions in aqueous solution

titration

process used to determine the concentration of a solution (often an acid or base) in which a solution of known concentration (the standard) is added to a measured amount of the solution of unknown concentration until an indicator signals the end point

triprotic acid

any acid that contains three ionizable protons (hydrogen ions); phosphoric acid (H3PO4) is a _______

weak acid

an acid that is only slightly ionized in aqueous soluions

weak base

a base that reacts with water to form the hydroxide ion and the conjugate acid of the base