Chemistry AP Ch. 14 Hangman

 
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Characteristics of Acids  Sour  
Characteristics of Bases  Bitter; Slippery  
Arrhenius Acid/Base  acids produce hydrogen ions in aqueous solution while bases produce hydroxide ions  
Bronsted-Lowry Acid/Base Model  Acids are protons (H+) donors and bases are proton acceptors  
Lewis Acid/Base Mordel  Acids are electron pair acceptors while bases are electron pair donors  
Hyrdronium Ion  H30+; can be used interchangably with H+.  
Conjugate Acid  Base + Proton (H+)  
Conjugate Base  everything that remains of an acid molecule after proton is lost. (HCl -> Cl-; HC2H3O2->C2H3O2-)  
Acid Dissociation Constant  A stupid name that Jones could use to throw us off and make us miss unnecessary points because we didnt read her notes. It's a fancy name for Ka  
Conj. Base of Weak Acid  strong conj. base. much stronger than water.  
Conj. base of Strong Acid  weak weak weak conjugate base.  
Amphoteric Substance  Substance that can act as an acid or as a base (H20, Fe(OH)3)  
Ion product constant of water  See Dissociateion constant of and acid. its just another name for a Kw; always 1E-14 at 25 degrees C  
At 25 degrees [H+][OH-]  ALWAYS EQUALS 1E-14.  
Finding pH from [H+]  -log[H+]  
Finding [H+] from pH  10^(-pH); antilog(-pH)  
pH of a polyprotic acid  if you are finding the pH ONLY, then you only have to do the first dissociation. the others are negligibly small  
finding the K value for a reverse equasion  K^-1; 1/K  
MetallicOxide (like CaO) dissolved in water  Metallic Hyrdoxide (like Ca(OH)2)  
Non-metallicOxides (like CO2) dissolved in water  Weak Acid! (like H2CO3)  
Strong Acids new from last year (excludes HNO3, HCl, H2SO4)  HClO4; HI; HBr; H2CrO4; HMnO4  
Oxyacid  acidic proton connected to O (HOCl) and the more Os, the more acidic  
Organic Acids  have carboxyl groups. (COOH)  
Salts of Highly Charged Metals  Produce acidic solutions; AlCl3 + 6H2O -> Al(H2O)6(3+) + 3Cl-; which then causes the rare instance of a H+ breaking off in Al(H20)6(3+) -> Al(H20)5(OH)(2+) + H+