Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Final blog due 05/09/212 10:00 pm

Compare and contrast Arrehnius, Bronsted Lowry, and Lewis acids and bases to each other. Focus on the definitions for each. A chart may help.

4 comments:

  1. Arrhenius acid: [H+] ion donor
    Arrhenius base: [OH-] ion donor
    Bronsted-Lowry acid: proton [H+] donor
    Bronsted-Lowry base: proton [H+] acceptor
    Lewis acid: electron acceptor
    Lewis base: electron donor

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  2. The Arrhenius model says that acids always contain H+ and that bases always contain OH-.

    The Bronsted-Lowry model thinks of acids as being proton donors and proton acceptors, so bases no longer need to contain OH-, and acids donate a proton to water forming H3O+. :) Lewis acids are electron pair acceptors, and Lewis bases are electron pair donors. H+ + OH- => H20. H+ has no electrons, so when it bonds to the Oxygen, it gains an electron pair. OH-"loses" an electron pair.

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  3. The Arrhenius model for acids and bases states that acids contain H+ ions and bases contain OH- ions. The Bronsted-Lowry acid base model states that acids are H+ donors and that bases are H+ acceptors. This might be more valid since not all bases have OH- ions, such as NH3. Finally, the Lewis acid base model focuses on the electrons and it states that acids are electron pair acceptors and bases are electron pair donors.

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  4. Arrhenius acid: produces H+ ions
    Arrhenius base: produces OH- ions
    Bronsted-Lowry acid: proton [H+] donor
    Bronsted-Lowry base: proton [H+] acceptor
    Lewis acid: electron acceptor
    Lewis base: electron donor

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