Activity 48 Follow-up • Discuss in your groups the difference in results for each neutralization between pairs. • Lack of consistency in drop size •
Download ReportTranscript Activity 48 Follow-up • Discuss in your groups the difference in results for each neutralization between pairs. • Lack of consistency in drop size •
Activity 48 Follow-up • Discuss in your groups the difference in results for each neutralization between pairs. • Lack of consistency in drop size • Error in counting • Difficultly deciding which number of drops gave a neutral solution if you overshot the neutral color • Contamination of equipment Analysis Questions 1. What happens as you add an acid to a basic solution or add a base to an acidic solution? • first becomes closer to neutral • eventually when you add too much, you overshoot the neutral point 2. Which solution seems more powerful in this investigation, the acidic or the basic? Explain your answer. • acid seems more powerful • takes more drops of base than acid to produce a neutral solution 3. Based on what you know so far, which do you think is a better way of neutralizing an acid: distilling it with water, or adding a base? • dilution is better because you only need water • when you add the base you are creating another product • neutralization is better, because dilution requires a huge volume of water • dilution because the change is more gradual and there is less chance to overshoot neutral. 4. Given two solutions, how might you determine: a. Whether these solutions are acidic or basic? – test them with universal indicator solution or pH paper – blue = base, red = acid b. Which is more acidic or basic? – mix equal amounts together and test with universal indicator – the more powerful solution will show up with the indicator Background Information • Both the HCl and the KOH are 1% solutions by mass. • There are different numbers of reacting particles in the two solutions of the same volume. • The more powerful the solution, the more capable it is of changing the pH of the mixed solution. Activity 48 Major Concepts • When they react in the appropriate ratio, an acidic solution and a basic solution will neutralize each other. • Substances react chemically with other substances to form new substances. For example, an acid reacts with a base to form a neutral product. • A change in pH is a chemical change. Activity 49 Title: A Model for Acid-Base Neutralization Read pg. C-94 Problem: How can acid-base neutralization be described in a model? Hypothesis/Initial Thoughts: The model you will be using today: • The 3 red As represent three acid particles (in one drop of acidic solution). • The 2 blue Bs represent two base particles (in one drop of basic solution). • These numbers represent the ratio of acid and base particles, not the actual number, which is many billions in a drop. • The whole class represents the solution—that is, all the drops that collectively make up a sample of solution. • For procedure step 1 your challenge is to determine if the solution (the class) is neutral. ---Suggestion: form several small neutral groups (groups w/ equal number of acid/base particles) Begin • Raise your hand if you are not part of a neutral solution. • Is the overall solution neutral? • What chemical, acidic or basic, would make this a neutral solution? • How many drops of it must be added to make this a neutral solution? • How would we prepare cards to represent a neutralization in which a drop of basic solution and a drop of acidic solution have equal numbers of acid and base particles? AA BB • Did the acid and base solutions in the neutralization we performed earlier have equal concentrations of particles per drop? Data/Observation: • Procedure steps 3 & 4: • Read the instructions in your book and draw the indicated diagrams in your lab notebook. Label each drawing according to the step number (3a, 3b, 4a, and 4b). 3a. BB A 3b. A A + BB = A/B A/B 4a. A A A B 4b. A A A B + B B = A/B A/B A/B Analysis Questions 1. For the example in Procedure Step 1, how many drops of base would be needed to neutralize: a. 2 drops of acid? Explain, or draw to show your reasoning. 3 drops of base because the acid droplet has 3 particles in it and the base droplet has 2. b. 10 drops of acid? – 15 drops – The acid droplet has 3 particles in it and the base droplet has 2 10 x 3 = 30 and 15 x 2 = 30 c. 4 liters of acid? – 6 liters of base – The acid droplet has 3 particles in it and the base droplet has 2 (even though the parts are in liters) 4 x 3 = 12 and 6 x 2 = 12 5. Given that the HCl and KOH solutions used in Activity 48 were 1% (each of them contains one gram of solute per 100 grams of solution), how could you explain that the ratio of particles per drop of the neutral solution is not 1:1? – HCl has more acid particles than KOH has base particles per gram – grams of each of the solutes don’t behave the same – It takes more KOH to neutralize HCl