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Acidity

Some metal-aqua ions have an acidic pH.

Metal-aqua ions

Metal-aqua ions

  • When transition metal compounds are dissolved in water, they form complex aqua ions.
  • These are ions with water molecules as ligands.
  • Most of these ions (and all the ones you should worry about) have six water ligands.
  • Aluminium (III) will also form a hexaaqua ion.
Acidity

Acidity

  • When you dissolve transition metal ions in water, you get hexaaqua ions.
    • But these ions are actually acidic.
    • M2+ ions will release some H+ into the solution.
    • M3+ ions are much more acidic.
Why are they acidic?

Why are they acidic?

  • The ions are positively charged.
    • This means they pull electron density off the water ligands and towards the metal ions.
    • This weakens the O-H bonds in the water molecules.
    • This makes H+ ions more likely to dissociate from the water molecules.
M<sup>2+</sup> vs M<sup>3+</sup>

M2+ vs M3+

  • M3+ ions are smaller, and have a higher charge.
    • They have a higher charge density.
    • Because they have a higher charge density, they pull harder on the electron density of the water ligands.
    • This weakens the O-H bonds more.
    • So M3+ ions are much more acidic than M2+ ions.

Reactions With Base

Metal aqua-ions will react with a base.

Insoluble metal precipitates

Insoluble metal precipitates

  • Adding sodium hydroxide to a solution of transition metal ions will remove multiple protons from the ligands.
  • You remove protons until the overall charge is neutralised.
    • These ions then precipitate out of solution because they are no longer charged.
M<sup>3+</sup> ions

M3+ ions

  • With [M(H2O)6]3+ ions, you remove three protons to get [M(H2O)3(OH)3]. The charge is neutralised and the hydroxide precipitates out of solution.
M<sup>2+</sup> ions

M2+ ions

  • With [M(H2O)6]2+ ions, you remove two protons to get [M(H2O)4(OH)2].
  • This also precipitates out of solution.

Amphotericity

Some compounds will react with both acids and bases.

Amphotericity

Amphotericity

  • An amphoteric compound is one which reacts with both acid and base.
    • This is pretty counter-intuitive because they can act as both acid and base!
  • All of the metal hydroxides we talked about in the previous concept module will react with acid.
    • They can all accept protons and go back to being hexaaqua ions.
  • Some of them can react with bases as well.
Aluminium hydroxide

Aluminium hydroxide

  • Aluminium hydroxide is actually [Al(OH)3(H2O)3].
    • If you add base, you can remove protons from the water ligands according to this equation:
    • [Al(OH)3(H2O)3](s) + OH-(aq) ⇋ [Al(OH)4]-(aq) + 3H2O(l)
  • But if you add acid, you can add protons according to this equation:
    • [Al(OH)3(H2O)3](s) + H+(aq) ⇋ [Al(H2O)6]3+(aq)
  • So aluminium hydroxide will react with acids and bases. It is amphoteric.
Jump to other topics
1

Physical Chemistry

1.1

Atomic Structure

1.2

Amount of Substance

1.3

Bonding

1.4

Energetics

1.5

Kinetics

1.6

Equilibria

1.7

Redox

2

Physical Chemistry 2 (A2 Only)

3

Inorganic Chemistry

4

Inorganic Chemistry 2 (A2 Only)

5

Organic Chemistry 1

6

Organic Chemistry 2 (A2 Only)

6.1

Optical Isomerism (A2 Only)

6.2

Aldehydes & Ketones (A2 Only)

6.3

Carboxylic Acids & Esters (A2 Only)

6.4

Aromatic Chemistry (A2 Only)

6.5

Amines (A2 Only)

6.6

Polymers (A2 Only)

6.7

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6.8

Organic Synthesis (A2 Only)

6.9

NMR Spectroscopy (A2 Only)

6.10

Chromatography (A2 Only)

6.11

A-A* (AO3/4) - Organic 2

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