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AP Chemistry Percent Dissociation: Strong & Weak Bases
Percent dissociation quantifies the amount of acid or base that dissociates in water. Strong acids dissociate 100%, but weak acids generally dissociate about 0.5% - 6% of the way. More dilute solutions dissociate more, but their pH doesn’t change. It can be used to calculate Kₐ. Strong bases generally dissociate into a positive ion and some number of OH- ions, which can later bond with a free hydrogen ion to make water. Weak bases like ammonia (NH₃) can produce OH⁻ by abstracting (taking) a hydrogen from water. Weak bases are in equilibrium with their conjugate acids, and they compete with everything else in solution (including the solvent) for H⁺ ions. ICE charts can be a very useful way to solve weak acid and base problems.
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Post by Tejas Jagadeesh on August 7, 2023
Why is theNa ignored and only the OH taken into account for ph?
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Post by Sara Tee on June 29, 2021
Hello Raffi. At 6:18, I was thinking when concentration of HF is lower, equilibrium position would shift left to make more HF and that, in turns, would cause lower % dissociation instead of higher % ? Am I missing something in my logic? Thanks!
1 answer
Wed Jan 27, 2016 4:07 PM
Post by Jinhai Zhang on January 16, 2016
Professor:
when you mentioned the biological catabolic, the aerobic respiration means the O2 is the final electron acceptor, and anaerobic respiration is non O2 for example S2-, or HS- as a final electron acceptor. they both go through citric acid cycle, and just has a different electron acceptor in chemiosmosis stage. And lactic acid form and alcohol formation is called a respiration which is Fermentation.
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Post by Caleb Lear on April 10, 2014
Perhaps another way to think of it would be the percent dissociation of the water. You check the part of the water that's left--the OH-- over the whole that was there.
Someone correct me if there's a conceptual problem here, this just makes sense to me.
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Thu Mar 13, 2014 8:39 PM
Post by Chemutai Shiow on March 9, 2014
In Example 2, why did you compare the concentration of the NaHO solution to the equilibrium constant of water? I thought you can only compare equilibrium constants to equilibrium constants.
1 answer
Wed Dec 18, 2013 7:45 PM
Post by Burhan Akram on December 18, 2013
Hello Prof. Raffi,
Can you also make a course on Physics as well? or is it not your field?
Thank You
Burhan Akram
1 answer
Fri Oct 12, 2012 4:59 PM
Post by Luis Esposito on October 12, 2012
question. in example 1 in the previous lecture, you used 10^-7 as the water concentration whereas in example 2 in this lecture you used 10^-14. why?
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Post by chenglong piao on September 12, 2012
That's what I thought too
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Thu Jul 26, 2012 10:08 PM
Post by Weiwei Gerl on July 26, 2012
I am confused about Example 5. Ka is known, but should I use Kw/Ka to find out the Kb first since CH3NH2 is a base?