Practice Flashcards
What is a Brønsted–Lowry acid?
Track your progress — Sign up free to save your progress and get smart review reminders based on spaced repetition.
All Flashcards in Topic 6.1
Below are all 36 flashcards for this topic. Sign up free to track your progress and get personalized review schedules.
6.1.112 cards
What is a Brønsted–Lowry acid?
A **proton (H⁺) donor**.
What is a Brønsted–Lowry base?
A **proton (H⁺) acceptor**.
What is a proton in acid–base chemistry?
A **hydrogen ion, H⁺** — a hydrogen atom that has lost its electron.
What is a conjugate acid–base pair?
Two species that differ by **exactly one H⁺** (an acid and the base left after it donates).
How do you get a conjugate base?
**Remove** one H⁺ from the acid (e.g. HCl → Cl⁻).
How do you get a conjugate acid?
**Add** one H⁺ to the base (e.g. NH_{3} → NH_{4}^{+}).
What is an amphiprotic species?
A species that can **both donate and accept** a proton (e.g. H_{2}O, HCO_{3}⁻).
Conjugate base of H_{2}SO_{4}?
**HSO_{4}⁻** (remove one H⁺ — not SO_{4}^{2-}, which is two H⁺ away).
Conjugate acid of H_{2}O?
**H_{3}O^{+}** (the oxonium / hydronium ion).
Two amphiprotic examples?
**H_{2}O** and **HCO_{3}⁻** — both can donate or accept a proton.
In HCl + H_{2}O → H_{3}O^{+} + Cl⁻, which is the acid?
**HCl** — it donates the proton; water is the base.
Why does an acid need a base present?
An acid can only **donate** H⁺ if a base is there to **accept** it — every proton transfer has both.
6.1.212 cards
What is pH?
A measure of acidity based on hydrogen-ion concentration: $\text{pH} = -\log_{10}[\text{H}^{+}]$.
Formula for pH?
$\text{pH} = -\log_{10}[\text{H}^{+}]$ — given in the data booklet.
How do you get [H_{+}] from pH?
$[\text{H}^{+}] = 10^{-\text{pH}}$ — the rearranged given equation.
What is K_{w}?
The ionic product of water, $K_{w} = [\text{H}^{+}][\text{OH}^{-}] = 1.0\times10^{-14}$ at 25 °C.
Acidic, neutral or basic by pH?
pH < 7 acidic · pH = 7 neutral · pH > 7 basic (alkaline), at 25 °C.
What does a change of 1 pH unit mean?
[H_{+}] changes by a factor of **10** (pH is a log scale).
Strong vs weak acid?
Strong = **fully** dissociated into ions; weak = only **partially** dissociated.
Does 'strong' mean 'concentrated'?
No — strength is the **degree of dissociation**; concentration is the amount dissolved.
Dissociation equation for a strong acid?
Single arrow, e.g. $\text{HCl} \rightarrow \text{H}^{+} + \text{Cl}^{-}$ (full dissociation).
Dissociation equation for a weak acid?
Equilibrium arrows, e.g. $\text{CH}_{3}\text{COOH} \rightleftharpoons \text{H}^{+} + \text{CH}_{3}\text{COO}^{-}$ (partial).
How to tell a strong from a weak acid at equal concentration?
Strong acid has a **lower pH**, **higher conductivity** and a **faster** reaction (more H_{+} ions).
Why does a strong acid have a lower pH than a weak acid of the same concentration?
It is fully dissociated, so it gives a **higher [H_{+}]**, and a higher [H_{+}] means a lower pH.
6.1.312 cards
What is neutralisation?
The reaction of an **acid with a base** to give a **salt and water**; the H⁺ and OH⁻ cancel out.
What is a salt?
The ionic compound formed when the **H⁺** of an acid is replaced by a **metal ion** (or NH_{4}⁺).
Acid + metal →
**salt + hydrogen** (e.g. Mg + 2HCl → MgCl_{2} + H_{2}).
Acid + base →
**salt + water** (neutralisation; the base is a metal oxide or hydroxide).
Acid + carbonate →
**salt + water + carbon dioxide** (e.g. 2HCl + CaCO_{3} → CaCl_{2} + H_{2}O + CO_{2}).
Which salt does HCl make?
A **chloride** (e.g. NaCl, MgCl_{2}).
Which salt does H_{2}SO_{4} make?
A **sulfate** (e.g. Na_{2}SO_{4}, MgSO_{4}).
Which salt does HNO_{3} make?
A **nitrate** (e.g. NaNO_{3}, Ca(NO_{3})_{2}).
Test for the gas from acid + metal?
**Hydrogen** gives a squeaky **'pop'** with a lit splint.
Test for the gas from acid + carbonate?
**Carbon dioxide** turns **limewater milky** (cloudy).
Why does H_{2}SO_{4} need two NaOH?
It is **diprotic** — it provides **two H⁺**, so it neutralises two 1+ bases: 2NaOH + H_{2}SO_{4} → Na_{2}SO_{4} + 2H_{2}O.
How do you build a salt's formula?
Balance the **ionic charges** (e.g. Mg²⁺ with Cl⁻ → MgCl_{2}), then balance the whole equation.
Topic 6.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Proton transfer reactions
Chemistry exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
Want smart review reminders?
Sign up free to track your progress. Our spaced repetition algorithm will tell you exactly which cards to review and when.
Start Free