The pH depends on the concentration of the solution. The strength of acids or bases depends on the extent to which they dissociate in aqueous solution.
- Strong acids and bases dissociate almost completely in solution:
$\rm HA(aq) + H_2O(l)$ $\rm \rightarrow HO^+_3(aq) + \dfrac{A^–(aq)}{HA(aq)}$ $\rm \rightarrow H^+(aq) + A^–(aq)$
Strong acids are good proton donors and have weak conjugate bases:
$\rm A^–(aq)$ is a weak base as the position of above equilibrium is completely to the right. - Strong bases are good proton acceptors and form weak conjugate acids.
$\rm B(aq) + H_2O(l)$ $\rm \rightarrow BH^+(aq) + OH^–(aq)$ - $\rm BH^+(aq)$ is a weak acid as the position of above equilibrium is completely to the right.
- Weak acids and bases form an equilibrium mixture:
$\rm HA(aq) + H_2O(l) \rightleftharpoons H_3O^+(aq) + A^–(aq)$ / $\rm HA(aq) \rightleftharpoons H^+(aq) + A^–(aq)$
$\rm B(aq) + H_2O(l) \rightleftharpoons BH^+(aq) + OH^–(aq)$ - Strong acids include: $\rm HCl$, $\rm H_2SO_4$, $\rm HNO_3$
- Strong bases include: $\rm LiOH$, $\rm NaOH$, $\rm KOH$, $\rm Ba(OH)_2$
- Weak acids include: $\rm CH_3COOH$, $\rm H_2CO_3$
- Weak bases include: $\rm NH_3$, $\rm C_2H_5NH_2$
- Strong and weak acids and bases can be distinguished by:
- $\rm pH$ measurement/indicator: stronger acids have a lower $\rm pH$
- conductivity: stronger acids have a higher conductivity as there are more ions present in aqueous solution.
- rate of reaction with metals, metal oxides, metal hydroxides, metal hydrogencarbonates and metal carbonates. Stronger acids have higher concentration of $\rm H^+(aq)$ and so react at a faster rate.
- Solutions of equal concentration should be used for fair comparisons of the strength of acids and bases.
- It is important to recognise that the terms "strong" and "weak" describe the nature of acids and bases not to their concentrations. A solution of a strong acid can be dilute.
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