2020 ch04 Lecture 7e01
2020 ch04 Lecture 7e01
2020 ch04 Lecture 7e01
MA Ruhai
马汝海
Department of Chemistry,
CMU
4-1
单选题 1分
提交
4-2
Water as a Solvent
Electron distribution in
molecules of H and H O.
2 2
4-3
Figure 4.2 An ionic compound dissolving in water.
4-4
Figure 4.3 The electrical conductivity of ionic solutions.
4-5
Concentration of Solutions & Molarity
4-6
Figure 4.4 Summary of mass-mole-number-volume
relationships in solution.
mass of substance(m B ) mB
amount of substance (n B )= ; nB =
molar mass(M B ) MB
nB
cB
V
4-7
Sample Problem 4.4 Calculating Mass of Solute in a Given
Volume of Solution
PROBLEM: How many grams of solute are in 1.75 L of 0.460 M
sodium monohydrogen phosphate buffer solution?
mB 0.460 moles
nB = 1.75 L x = 0.805 mol Na2HPO4
MB 1L
4-8
Sample Problem 4.5 Determining Amount (mol) of Ions in a
Solution
PROBLEM: What amount (mol) of each ion is in 35 mL of 0.84 M
zinc chloride?
PLAN: We write an equation that shows 1 mol of compound dissociating
into ions. We convert molarity and volume to moles of zinc
chloride and use the dissociation equation to convert moles of
compound to moles of ions.
SOLUTION: ZnCl2 (aq) → Zn2+ (aq) + 2Cl– (aq)
Converting from volume (mL) and molarity (mol/L) to amount (mol) of
compound: 1L 0.84 mol ZnCl2
n(ZnCl2) = 35 mL x x
1000 mL 1L
nB
cB ; nB V cB = 2.9 x 10–2 mol ZnCl2
V
2 mol Cl–
n(Cl–)= 2.9 x 10–2 mol ZnCl2 x = 5.8 x 10–2 mol Cl–
1 mol ZnCl2
2.9 x 10–2 mol Zn2+ is also present.
CHECK: The relative numbers of moles of ions are consistent with the
formula for ZnCl2: 0.029 mol Zn2+/0.058 mol Cl– = 1 Zn2+ / 2 Cl–, or ZnCl2.
4-9
单选题 1分
A 0.00952 M
B 1.44 M
C 0.692 M
D 0.152 M
提交
4-10
WRITING EQUATIONS FOR AQUEOUS
IONIC
REACTIONS
4-11
Precipitation Reactions
4-12
Predicting Whether a Precipitate Will Form
NaI ( s ) + KNO3(s)
1. Note the ions present in the reactants.
3. Use the solubility rules to decide whether any of the ion combinations is
insoluble.
– Any insoluble combination identifies a precipitate that will form.
4-13
4-14
4-15
单选题 1分
A Na3PO4
B AgNO3
C NaCl
D CaCO3
提交
4-16
单选题 1分
A Na2S
B PbI2
C CuS
D Ca3(PO4)2
4-17
提交
单选题 1分
4-19
Figure 4.11 The H+ ion as a solvated hydronium ion.
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
4-20
Figure 4.12 Acids and bases as electrolytes.
4-21
Figure 4.12 Acids and bases as electrolytes.
Weak acids and weak bases dissociate very little into ions in aqueous
solution.
They are weak electrolytes and conduct poorly in solution.
4-22
Sample Problem 4.13 Writing Ionic Equations for Acid-Base
Reactions
PLAN: All reactants are strong acids and bases (see Table 4.2). The
product in each case is H2O and an ionic salt.
Write the molecular reaction in each case and use the
solubility rules to determine if the product is soluble or not.
4-23
Sample Problem 4.13
SOLUTION:
Molecular equation:
HCl (aq) + KOH (aq) → KCl (aq) + H2O (l)
4-24
Acid-Base Titrations
• In a titration, the concentration of one solution is used to
determine the concentration of another.
• In an acid-base titration, a standard solution of base is
usually added to a sample of acid of unknown molarity.
• An acid-base indicator has different colors in acid and
base, and is used to monitor the reaction progress.
• At the equivalence point, the mol of H+ from the acid
equals the mol of OH- ion produced by the base.
– Amount of H+ ion in flask = amount of OH- ion added
• The end point occurs when there is a slight excess of
base and the indicator changes color permanently.
4-25
Sample Problem 4.15 Calculating the Amounts of Reactants
and Products in an Acid-Base Reaction
PROBLEM: A 0.10 M HCl solution is used to simulate the acid
concentration of the stomach. How many liters of “stomach
acid” react with a tablet containing 0.10 g of magnesium
hydroxide?
PLAN: Write a balanced equation and convert the mass of Mg(OH)2 to
moles. Use the mole ratio to determine the moles of HCl, then
convert to volume using molarity.
Mass Mg(OH)2
divide by M
Amount (mol) Mg(OH)2
use mole ratio divide by M
Amount (mol) HCl Volume HCl
4-26
Sample Problem 4.15
SOLUTION:
4-27
Sample Problem 4.16 Finding the Concentration of Acid from a
Titration
Since 1 mol of HCl reacts with 1 mol NaOH, the amount of HCl
= 5.078 x 10-3 mol.
4-29
Oxidation-Reduction (Redox) Reactions
4-30
Figure 4.16 The redox process in compound formation.
4-31
oxidation number (O.N.), or oxidation state, the
charge the atom would have if electrons were not
shared but were transferred completely.
the oxidation number for each element in a
binary ionic compound equals the ionic charge.
4-32
Table 4.3 Rules for Assigning an Oxidation Number (O.N.)
General rules
1. For an atom in its elemental form (Na, O2, Cl2, etc.): O.N. = 0
2. For a monoatomic ion: O.N. = ion charge
3. The sum of O.N. values for the atoms in a compound equals zero. The sum
of O.N. values for the atoms in a polyatomic ion equals the ion’s charge.
4-33
Sample Problem 4.17 Determining the Oxidation Number of Each
Element in a Compound (or Ion)
4-34
Sample Problem 4.18
+6 +6
0 +1 –2 +3 –2 0
2Al(s) + 3H2SO4(aq) → Al2 (SO4)3(aq) + 3H2(g)
reduction
4-35
Sample Problem 4.18
(b) Assigning oxidation numbers:
+1 –2 +1 +1 –2 +1
–2 +6 –2
+6 +1
4-36
Sample Problem 4.18
oxidation
–2 –2 –2
+2 +2 0 +4
PbO(s) + CO(g) → Pb(s) + CO2(g)
reduction
4-37
Figure 4.17 A summary of terminology for redox reactions.
4-38
Balancing Redox Equations
(oxidation number method)
1. Assign O.N.s to all atoms.
2. Identify the reactants that are oxidized and reduced.
3. Compute the numbers of electrons transferred, and
draw tie-lines from each reactant atom to the product
atom to show the change.
4. Multiply the numbers of electrons by factor(s) that make
the electrons lost equal to the electrons gained.
5. Use the factor(s) as balancing coefficients.
6. Complete the balancing by inspection and add states of
matter.
4-39
THE REVERSIBILITY OF REACTIONS
AND THE EQUILIBRIUM STATE
4-40
THE REVERSIBILITY OF REACTIONS
AND THE EQUILIBRIUM STATE
4-41
单选题 1分
B 0.0524 M
C 1.13 M
D 2.26 M
提交
4-42
单选题 1分
A Mn in MnO2 is oxidized.
B H in KOH is oxidized.