The diagram shows the complete dissociation of a strong acid in aqueous solution
pH is the negative log of the concentration of H+/H3O+?ions and can be calculated if the?concentration of the strong acid is known using the stoichiometry of the reaction
The diagram shows the partial dissociation of a weak acid in aqueous solution
Acid & Equilibrium Position Table
The diagram shows the complete dissociation of a strong base in aqueous solution
The diagram shows the partial dissociation of a weak base in aqueous solution
Base & Equilibrium Position Table
HCl (g) → H+?(aq)? +? ?Cl-?(aq)
acid? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? conjugate base
OH-?(aq)+??H+?(aq)? ?? H2O (l)
Hydrogen ions in aqueous solutions can be written as either as H3O+?or as H+?however, if H3O+?is used, H2O should be included in the chemical equation:?HCl(g) → H+(aq) + Cl-(aq)? ?OR?HCl(g) + H2O(l) → H3O+(aq) + Cl-(aq)?Some acids contain two replaceable protons ( called 'dibasic') – for example, H2SO4?(sulfuric acid) has two ionisations: H2SO4?acts as a strong acid:?H2SO4?→ H+?+ SO4-HSO4-?acts as a weak acid:?HSO4-?? H+?+ SO42-The second ionisation is only partial which is why the concentration of 1?mol dm-3?sulfuric acid is not 2?mol dm-3?in H+?ions?Also, don't forget that the terms?strong?and?weak?acids and bases are related to the?degree of dissociation?and not the?concentration.The appropriate terms to use when describing?concentration?are?dilute?and?concentrated.
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