Jump to content

General Chemistry/Properties and Theories of Acids and Bases/Answers

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world

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-