Concept Summary
Acids and Bases
Nucleophiles, Electrophiles, and Leaving Groups
Lewis acids are electron acceptors; they have vacant orbitals or positively polarized atoms.
Lewis bases are electron donors; they have a lone pair of electrons and are often anions.
Brønsted–Lowry acids are proton donors; Brønsted–Lowry bases are proton acceptors.
Amphoteric molecules can act as either acids or bases, depending on reaction conditions. Water
is a common example of an amphoteric molecule.
The acid dissociation constant, Ka, is a measure of acidity. It is the equilibrium constant
corresponding to the dissociation of an acid, HA, into a proton (H+) and its conjugate base (A–).
pKa is the negative logarithm of Ka. A lower (or even negative) pKa indicates a stronger acid.
pKa decreases down the periodic table and increases with electronegativity.
Alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, and carboxylic acid derivatives are common acidic
functional groups. α-hydrogens (hydrogens connected to an α-carbon, a carbon adjacent to a
carbonyl) are acidic.
Amines and amides are common basic functional groups.
Nucleophiles are “nucleus-loving” and contain lone pairs or π bonds. They have increased
electron density and often carry a negative charge.
Nucleophilicity is similar to basicity; however, nucleophilicity is a kinetic property, while
basicity is thermodynamic.
Charge, electronegativity, steric hindrance, and the solvent can all affect nucleophilicity.
Amino groups are common organic nucleophiles.
Electrophiles are “electron-loving” and contain a positive charge or are positively polarized.