sign up I login
 advanced
refer a friend - earn nickels!!

Community Contributions - Articles by goIITians

  Back to Community Shelf like the article? email it to a friend. email this article!  
  The Arrhenius Theory of acids and bases   Awaiting Review for Nickels
Tagged with:    [Post New]posted on 12 Feb 2008 17:13:35 IST    
The Theory of acids and bases

The theory
  • Acids are substances which produce hydrogen ions in solution.
  • Bases are substances which produce hydroxide ions in solution.
Neutralisation happens because hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions react to produce water.
 
 
 
Limitations of the theory
 
Hydrochloric acid is neutralised by both sodium hydroxide solution and ammonia solution. In both cases, you get a colourless solution which you can crystallise to get a white salt - either sodium chloride or ammonium chloride.
 
These are clearly very similar reactions. The full equations are:
 
 
 
 
 
In the sodium hydroxide case, hydrogen ions from the acid are reacting with hydroxide ions from the sodium hydroxide - in line with the Arrhenius theory.
However, in the ammonia case, there don't appear to be any hydroxide ions!
You can get around this by saying that the ammonia reacts with the water it is dissolved in to produce ammonium ions and hydroxide ions:
 
 
 
 
This is a reversible reaction, and in a typical dilute ammonia solution, about 99% of the ammonia remains as ammonia molecules. Nevertheless, there are hydroxide ions there, and we can squeeze this into the Arrhenius theory.
However, this same reaction also happens between ammonia gas and hydrogen chloride gas.
 
 
 
In this case, there aren't any hydrogen ions or hydroxide ions in solution - because there isn't any solution. The Arrhenius theory wouldn't count this as an acid-base reaction, despite the fact that it is producing the same product as when the two substances were in solution. That's silly!
The Bronsted-Lowry Theory of acids and bases
The theory
  • An acid is a proton (hydrogen ion) donor.
  • A base is a proton (hydrogen ion) acceptor.
The relationship between the Bronsted-Lowry theory and the Arrhenius theory
 
 
The Bronsted-Lowry theory doesn't go against the Arrhenius theory in any way - it just adds to it.
 
Hydroxide ions are still bases because they accept hydrogen ions from acids and form water.
 
An acid produces hydrogen ions in solution because it reacts with the water molecules by giving a proton to them.
 
When hydrogen chloride gas dissolves in water to produce hydrochloric acid, the hydrogen chloride molecule gives a proton (a hydrogen ion) to a water molecule. A co-ordinate (dative covalent) bond is formed between one of the lone pairs on the oxygen and the hydrogen from the HCl. Hydroxonium ions, H3O+, are produced.
 
 


When an acid in solution reacts with a base, what is actually functioning as the acid is the hydroxonium ion. For example, a proton is transferred from a hydroxonium ion to a hydroxide ion to make water.
 
 
 
 
Showing the electrons, but leaving out the inner ones:
 
 
It is important to realise that whenever you talk about hydrogen ions in solution, H+(aq), what you are actually talking about are hydroxonium ions.
 
 
The hydrogen chloride / ammonia problem
 
This is no longer a problem using the Bronsted-Lowry theory. Whether you are talking about the reaction in solution or in the gas state, ammonia is a base because it accepts a proton (a hydrogen ion). The hydrogen becomes attached to the lone pair on the nitrogen of the ammonia via a co-ordinate bond.
 
 
 
 
If it is in solution, the ammonia accepts a proton from a hydroxonium ion:
 
 
If the reaction is happening in the gas state, the ammonia accepts a proton directly from the hydrogen chloride:
 
 
 
Either way, the ammonia acts as a base by accepting a hydrogen ion from an acid.
Conjugate pairs
 
When hydrogen chloride dissolves in water, almost 100% of it reacts with the water to produce hydroxonium ions and chloride ions. Hydrogen chloride is a strong acid, and we tend to write this as a one-way reaction:
 
 

 
In fact, the reaction between HCl and water is reversible, but only to a very minor extent. In order to generalise, consider an acid HA, and think of the reaction as being reversible.
 
 
Thinking about the forward reaction:
  • The HA is an acid because it is donating a proton (hydrogen ion) to the water.
  • The water is a base because it is accepting a proton from the HA.
But there is also a back reaction between the hydroxonium ion and the A- ion:
  • The H3O+ is an acid because it is donating a proton (hydrogen ion) to the A- ion.
  • The A- ion is a base because it is accepting a proton from the H3O+.
The reversible reaction contains two acids and two bases. We think of them in pairs, called conjugate pairs.
 
 
 
 
When the acid, HA, loses a proton it forms a base, A-. When the base, A-, accepts a proton back again, it obviously refoms the acid, HA. These two are a conjugate pair.
 
 
Members of a conjugate pair differ from each other by the presence or absence of the transferable hydrogen ion.
 
If you are thinking about HA as the acid, then A- is its conjugate base.
 
If you are thinking about A- as the base, then HA is its conjugate acid.
 
The water and the hydroxonium ion are also a conjugate pair.
 
Thinking of the water as a base, the hydroxonium ion is its conjugate acid because it has the extra hydrogen ion which it can give away again.
 
Thinking about the hydroxonium ion as an acid, then water is its conjugate base. The water can accept a hydrogen ion back again to reform the hydroxonium ion.
 
A second example of conjugate pairs
 
 
This is the reaction between ammonia and water that we looked at earlier:
 
Think first about the forward reaction. Ammonia is a base because it is accepting hydrogen ions from the water. The ammonium ion is its conjugate acid - it can release that hydrogen ion again to reform the ammonia.
The water is acting as an acid, and its conjugate base is the hydroxide ion. The hydroxide ion can accept a hydrogen ion to reform the water.
Looking at it from the other side, the ammonium ion is an acid, and ammonia is its conjugate base. The hydroxide ion is a base and water is its conjugate acid.
 
Amphoteric substances
 
You may possibly have noticed (although probably not!) that in one of the last two examples, water was acting as a base, whereas in the other one it was acting as an acid.
A substance which can act as either an acid or a base is described as being amphoteric.
 
 

 
The Lewis Theory of acids and bases
This theory extends well beyond the things you normally think of as acids and bases.
The theory
  • An acid is an electron pair acceptor.
  • A base is an electron pair donor.
The relationship between the Lewis theory and the Bronsted-Lowry theory
Lewis bases
It is easiest to see the relationship by looking at exactly what Bronsted-Lowry bases do when they accept hydrogen ions. Three Bronsted-Lowry bases we've looked at are hydroxide ions, ammonia and water, and they are typical of all the rest.
The Bronsted-Lowry theory says that they are acting as bases because they are combining with hydrogen ions. The reason they are combining with hydrogen ions is that they have lone pairs of electrons - which is what the Lewis theory says. The two are entirely consistent.
So how does this extend the concept of a base? At the moment it doesn't - it just looks at it from a different angle.
But what about other similar reactions of ammonia or water, for example? On the Lewis theory, any reaction in which the ammonia or water used their lone pairs of electrons to form a co-ordinate bond would be counted as them acting as a base.
Here is a reaction which you will find talked about on the page dealing with co-ordinate bonding. Ammonia reacts with BF3 by using its lone pair to form a co-ordinate bond with the empty orbital on the boron.
As far as the ammonia is concerned, it is behaving exactly the same as when it reacts with a hydrogen ion - it is using its lone pair to form a co-ordinate bond. If you are going to describe it as a base in one case, it makes sense to describe it as one in the other case as well.


Lewis acids
 
Lewis acids are electron pair acceptors. In the above example, the BF3 is acting as the Lewis acid by accepting the nitrogen's lone pair. On the Bronsted-Lowry theory, the BF3 has nothing remotely acidic about it.
This is an extension of the term acid well beyond any common use.
What about more obviously acid-base reactions - like, for example, the reaction between ammonia and hydrogen chloride gas?
 
 
What exactly is accepting the lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen. Textbooks often write this as if the ammonia is donating its lone pair to a hydrogen ion - a simple proton with no electrons around it.
 
That is misleading! You don't usually get free hydrogen ions in chemical systems. They are so reactive that they are always attached to something else. There aren't any uncombined hydrogen ions in HCl.
 
There isn't an empty orbital anywhere on the HCl which can accept a pair of electrons. Why, then, is the HCl a Lewis acid
 
Chlorine is more electronegative than hydrogen, and that means that the hydrogen chloride will be a polar molecule.
 
The electrons in the hydrogen-chlorine bond will be attracted towards the chlorine end, leaving the hydrogen slightly positive and the chlorine slightly negative.
 


The lone pair on the nitrogen of an ammonia molecule is attracted to the slightly positive hydrogen atom in the HCl. As it approaches it, the electrons in the hydrogen-chlorine bond are repelled still further towards the chlorine.
Eventually, a co-ordinate bond is formed between the nitrogen and the hydrogen, and the chlorine breaks away as a chloride ion.
 
This is best shown using the "curly arrow" notation commonly used in organic reaction mechanisms.
 
 

 
 
The whole HCl molecule is acting as a Lewis acid. It is accepting a pair of electrons from the ammonia, and in the process it breaks up. Lewis acids don't necessarily have to have an existing empty orbital.
  
A final comment on Lewis acids and bases
 
  • A Lewis acid is an electron pair acceptor.
  • A Lewis base is an electron pair donor.
 
About the Author:
kasirajan.1990 (1084)

Blazing goIITian

Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer. 204  [236 rates]

kasirajan.1990's Avatar

total posts: 466    
online Offline
 this article: 110 points  (with 22 Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 22 votes )   [?]
 
You have to be logged on to rate
  
apurviitjee2008
apurviitjee2008 is offline comment by apurviitjee2008    (posted on 12 Feb 2008 17:19:20 IST)
nice................
srujana
srujana is online comment by srujana    (posted on 12 Feb 2008 17:48:14 IST)
good presentation !!
harsha_27
harsha_27 is offline comment by harsha_27    (posted on 12 Feb 2008 17:54:43 IST)
Good One..........Change the name to Acids and Bases as u've described all the theories(i mean not only Arrhenius).............
SowmyaTs
SowmyaTs is offline comment by SowmyaTs    (posted on 12 Feb 2008 18:01:03 IST)
its vry convenient to read..
elastiboysai
elastiboysai is offline comment by elastiboysai    (posted on 12 Feb 2008 18:17:47 IST)
Nice one dude.
svj29
svj29 is offline comment by svj29    (posted on 12 Feb 2008 19:05:40 IST)
gr8 job dude...
kane
kane is offline comment by kane    (posted on 12 Feb 2008 22:24:45 IST)
well done brother
mona840
mona840 is offline comment by mona840    (posted on 12 Feb 2008 22:30:09 IST)
hey dis is realy gud ..n gud presentation 2
:)
apoorva_43
apoorva_43 is offline comment by apoorva_43    (posted on 13 Feb 2008 08:50:44 IST)
gud! n yea nice presentation
ashgirl
ashgirl is offline comment by ashgirl    (posted on 13 Feb 2008 13:10:17 IST)
nicely put up,yaar. gr8...
saurabh_reincarnated
saurabh_reincarnated is offline comment by saurabh_reincarnated    (posted on 13 Feb 2008 13:56:47 IST)
very nicely presented an imp. topic......
worth of a salute.........

keep postin some articles on very very important concepts......
nice wrk..........
Cheers!!!!!!!
kasirajan.1990
kasirajan.1990 is offline comment by kasirajan.1990    (posted on 13 Feb 2008 13:58:02 IST)
thnku soo much frnd..fr ur valuable comments n rates,,!
rhd92781
rhd92781 is offline comment by rhd92781    (posted on 13 Feb 2008 14:01:31 IST)
nicy!!!
sneha_k
sneha_k is offline comment by sneha_k    (posted on 13 Feb 2008 14:12:41 IST)
vry nice
Go to:   

Top Offers for goIITians
Correspondence Courses
Brilliant Tutorials
Narayana Institute
Aakash Institute
Classroom/Crash Courses
Narayana - Kota , Delhi , Others
Brilliant Tutorials - Class , Crash
Aakash Institute - Medical , Engg
Online Test Series
Brilliant Tutorials
Narayana Institute
Aakash Institute
Mahesh Tutorials
AMITY      Sri Chaitanya