Acids and bases
19 flashcards to master Acids and bases
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Describe the reaction of an acid with a metal.
Acids react with some metals to produce a salt and hydrogen gas.
Describe the reaction of an acid with a base.
Acids react with bases in a neutralisation reaction to produce a salt and water.
Describe the reaction of an acid with a carbonate.
Acids react with carbonates to produce a salt, water, and carbon dioxide gas.
What colour change does litmus paper undergo in an acid?
Litmus paper turns red in the presence of an acid.
What colour change does thymolphthalein undergo in an acid?
Thymolphthalein is colourless in acidic conditions.
What colour change does methyl orange undergo in an acid?
Methyl orange turns red in the presence of an acid.
What type of substance are bases and alkalis?
Bases are oxides or hydroxides of metals. Alkalis are soluble bases.
Describe the reaction of a base with an acid.
Bases react with acids in a neutralisation reaction to produce a salt and water.
Describe the reaction of a base with an ammonium salt.
Bases react with ammonium salts to produce a salt, water, and ammonia gas.
What colour change does litmus paper undergo in an alkali?
Litmus paper turns blue in the presence of an alkali.
What colour change does thymolphthalein undergo in an alkali?
Thymolphthalein turns blue in alkaline conditions.
What colour change does methyl orange undergo in an alkali?
Methyl orange turns yellow in the presence of an alkali.
What ions are present in aqueous solutions of acids and alkalis?
Aqueous solutions of acids contain H⁺ ions, and aqueous solutions of alkalis contain OH⁻ ions.
Write the neutralisation reaction between an acid and an alkali, using ions.
The neutralisation reaction between an acid and an alkali is: H⁺(aq) + OH⁻(aq) → H₂O(l). This represents the formation of water from hydrogen and hydroxide ions.
Define acids and bases in terms of proton transfer.
Acids are proton donors, and bases are proton acceptors.
Define a strong acid and a weak acid in terms of dissociation.
A strong acid is completely dissociated in aqueous solution, while a weak acid is only partially dissociated. Strong acids have more H⁺ ions in solution than weak acids of the same concentration.
Give an example of a strong acid and its dissociation equation.
Hydrochloric acid (HCl) is a strong acid: HCl(aq) → H⁺(aq) + Cl⁻(aq). The single arrow indicates complete dissociation.
Give an example of a weak acid and its dissociation equation.
Ethanoic acid (CH₃COOH) is a weak acid: CH₃COOH(aq) ⇌ H⁺(aq) + CH₃COO⁻(aq). The double arrow indicates partial dissociation, and that an equilibrium is formed.
If 20.0 cm³ of 0.0150 mol/dm³ Ca(OH)₂ is neutralised by 25.0 cm³ of HNO₃, what is the concentration of the HNO₃ in g/dm³? (Mr of HNO₃ = 63)
1. Moles of Ca(OH)₂ = (20.0/1000) * 0.0150 = 0.0003 mol. 2. Moles of HNO₃ = 2 * 0.0003 = 0.0006 mol. 3. Concentration of HNO₃ (mol/dm³) = 0.0006 / (25.0/1000) = 0.024 mol/dm³. 4. Concentration of HNO₃ (g/dm³) = 0.024 * 63 = 1.512 g/dm³ or 1.51 g/dm³ (to 3 s.f.)
Key Questions: Acids and bases
What type of substance are bases and alkalis?
Bases are oxides or hydroxides of metals. Alkalis are soluble bases.
Define acids and bases in terms of proton transfer.
Acids are proton donors, and bases are proton acceptors.
Define a strong acid and a weak acid in terms of dissociation.
A strong acid is completely dissociated in aqueous solution, while a weak acid is only partially dissociated. Strong acids have more H⁺ ions in solution than weak acids of the same concentration.
About Acids and bases (7.1)
These 19 flashcards cover everything you need to know about Acids and bases for your Cambridge IGCSE Chemistry (0620) exam. Each card is designed based on the official syllabus requirements.
What You'll Learn
- 3 Definitions - Key terms and their precise meanings that examiners expect
- 9 Key Concepts - Core ideas and principles from the 0620 syllabus
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After mastering Acids and bases, explore these related topics:
- 6.3 Redox - 12 flashcards
- 7.2 Reactions of acids - 10 flashcards
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