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Acid Strength
Bert Markgraf
Strong acids have weakly
bound hydrogen atoms, and the molecules easily separate from them in solution.
How many of these hydrogen
atoms dissociate and form hydrogen ions determines the strength of an acid.
Strong acids lose most or
all of their hydrogen atoms in a water solution and form H3O ions
with a positive charge.
The rest of the acid
molecule forms a separate ion with a negative charge.
TL;DR (Too Long; Didn't Read)
For strong acids, most or
all of the weakly bound hydrogen atoms in their molecules form hydrogen ions in
a water solution.
Weak acids stay mostly together
as molecules, and only a few of their hydrogen atoms form ions.
The positive hydrogen ions
and corresponding negative ions of the rest of the acid molecule give acids
their principal characteristics.
Strong Acids and How They
Dissociate
The strongest commonly
available acids include hydrochloric acid, HCl, and sulfuric acid, H2SO4.
The bond between the
hydrogen and chlorine atoms of hydrochloric acid is weak enough that all the
hydrogen atoms dissociate themselves from the chlorine atoms when the acid dissolves
in water.
The hydrogen atoms in the
hydrochloric acid molecules lost their single electrons to the chlorine atoms
in the chemical reaction that formed the hydrochloric acid compound.
As a result, the hydrogen
atoms form ions with a plus one charge, and the chlorine atoms form ions with a
charge of minus one.
Similarly, the hydrogen
atoms of the sulfuric acid molecule lost their electrons in the chemical
reaction that formed sulfuric acid.
They are also weakly held
and dissociate themselves from the SO4 atoms to form two
hydrogen ions with a plus one charge.
The SO4 atoms
form a negative sulfate ion with a charge of minus two.
How Strong Bases Dissociate
Where the hydrogen ions of
strong acids dissociate in water and give the solution the characteristics of
an acid, the hydroxide ion plays the same role for strong bases.
Sodium hydroxide, NaOH, and
calcium hydroxide, Ca(OH)2, are examples of strong bases that
dissociate completely in water.
The weakly held OH ion with
a charge of minus one dissociates from the sodium ion with a charge of plus one
or the calcium ion with a charge of plus two.
The large number of OH ions
in the water gives the solution the characteristics of a strong base.
Because strong acids and
bases completely dissociate in water, they can neutralize each other and
produce a stable salt.
If the correct proportions
of an acid and a base are slowly mixed, the H hydrogen ions with a positive
charge combine with the negatively charged OH hydroxide ions to form water.
The other parts of the
molecules dissolved in the water combine to form a salt.
For example, if sodium hydroxide
is slowly added to hydrochloric acid, the OH ions of the sodium hydroxide
combine with the H ions of the hydrochloric acid to form water.
The sodium ions combine with
the chlorine ions to form sodium chloride or table salt.
Because of the strength of
the acid and the base, all their ions dissolved, and all combined to form
water.
Strong acids and strong
bases can completely neutralize each other.
Bert Markgraf is a freelance writer with a strong science and
engineering background. He has written for scientific publications such as the
HVDC Newsletter and the Energy and Automation Journal. Online he has written
extensively on science-related topics in math, physics, chemistry and biology
and has been published on sites such as Digital Landing and Reference.com He
holds a Bachelor of Science degree from McGill University.
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