Chapter 12 Acid-Base Chemistry
e) Solutions of ammonium nitrate and sodium bromide are mixed.
(^1) NH
1+ 4
- NO
1- 3 - Na
1+ + Br
1-^
2
- No precipitate is predicted. NH
1+ 4
ion is a weak acid, but Br
1- ion is a weaker base
than water,* so NH
1+ 4
would react with water, not bromide ion in aqueous solution.
Thus, the only reaction to take place would be the following:
NH
1+ 4
+ H
O 2
U
NH
+ OH 3
1-^
2.
NaNO
is soluble, so Na 3
1+ and NO
1- 3
are spectator ions.
f) Hydrogen sulfide is added to an excess of aqueous NH
. 3
This is a weak acid/weak base reaction. H
S is a diprotic acid (having two protons); but, in 2
Brønsted acid-base reactions, the prot
ons are removed one at a time. H
S is a stronger 2
acid than NH
1+ 4
, but the equilibrium constant (K = (1.0x10
-7)/(5.6x10
-10
) = 1.8x10
2 ) is not
greater than 10
3 , so double arrows are used.
H NH H
H SH
HN
H
H
H
H S
NH
+ H 3
S 2
U
NH
1+ 4
+ HS
1-^
HS
1- is amphiprotic because it is
not only the conj
ugate base of H
S, but it is also the 2
conjugate acid of the S
2- ion. However, a check of the acid-base table indicates that HS
1-
is such a weak acid that it does not reac
t extensively with the remaining (excess) NH
(K = 3
(1.3x10
-13
)/(5.6x10
-10
) = 2.3x10
-4). HS
1- is the predominant sulfur-containing species.
H NH H
SH
HN
H
H
H
-2S
NH
+ HS 3
1-^
U
NH
1+ 4
+ S
2-^
(^1) Ag
1+ + F
1- + H
O 3
1+ + Cl
1-^
2
g) Solutions of silver fluoride and hydrochloric acid are mixed.
Hydrochloric acid is a strong acid and must be written as H
O 3
1+ + Cl
1-.
- Silver chloride is insoluble, so it precip
itates from the solution (Solubility Rule 3).
Ag
1+ + Cl
1-^
→
AgCl(s)
- This is a strong acid-weak base reaction.
H
O 3
1+ + F
1-^
→
HF + H
O K = (1.0)/(7.2x10 2
-4) = 1.4x10
3
Both reactions are extensive.
© by
North
Carolina
State
University