General Chemistry/Properties and Theories of Acids and Bases/Answers
Appearance
1.
- a) hydrobromic acid
- b) sulfuric acid
- c) potassium hydroxide, base
- d) sulfurous acid
- e) phosphoric acid
- f) bromous acid
- g) sodium chloride, neutral salt
2. Substance: conjugate acid; conjugate base
- a) water (H2O): hydronium (H3O+); hydroxide (OH-)
- b) ammonia (NH3): ammonium (NH4+); amide (NH2-)
- c) bisulfate ion (HSO4-): sulfuric acid (H2SO4); sulfate ion (SO42-)
- d) zinc hydroxide (Zn(OH)2): Zn(OH)+; no conjugate base
- e) hydrobromic acid (HBr): no conjugate acid; Br-
- f) nitrite ion (NO2-): nitrous acid (HNO2); no conjugate base
- g) dihydrogen phosphate ion (H2PO4-): phosphoric acid (H3PO4); biphosphate ion (HPO42-)
3.
- a) A, E
- b) B, C
- c) A, B, C, E
- d) D
- e) No. Both acids and bases will conduct electricity.
4. Conjugate acids are underlined. Conjugate bases are in bold font.
- a) HCl + H2O → H3O + Cl-
- b) HClO + H2O → ClO- + H3O
- c) CH3CH2NH2 + H2O → CH3CH2NH3+ + OH-
5.
- a) strontium hydroxide: both
- b) butyllithium (C4H9Li): Brønsted-Lowry (reacts with protons to form C4H10 + Li)
- c) ammonia: Brønsted-Lowry
- d) potassium hydroxide: both
- e) potassium iodide: neither
6. No, pure water can still have a very minute amount of dissolved ions.
- H2O + H2O → H3O+ + OH-