Strong Acids & Weak Acids

This lesson covers:

  1. The differences between strong and weak acids
  2. The relationship between a solution's pH, and the concentration of hydrogen ions
  3. The difference between the terms 'strength' and 'concentration'

A substance which forms an aqueous solution with a pH of less than 7 is defined as:

A base

An alkali

An acid

A salt

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When acid molecules are added to water and split apart, we say that they 'ionise' or 'dissociate'. These two words both mean the same thing. 

acids ionise completely, whereas acids only partially ionise. 

Strong
weak

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Cartoon illustration of a strong acid represented by a muscular beaker.

Which of the following substances are strong acids?

(Select all that apply)

Nitric acid

Hydrochloric acid

Ethanoic acid

Citric acid

Sulfuric acid

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True or false? The dissociation of weak acids is a reversible reaction, which means that the products can react together to reform the acid.

True

False

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For a weak acid, does the position of equilibrium lie to the left or the right?

Left

Right

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Which of the following substances are weak acids?

(Select all that apply)

Ethanoic acid

Citric acid

Hydrochloric acid

Carbonic acid

Nitric acid

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Illustration of a cartoon representation of carbonic acid, described as a weak acid.

Carbonic acid is described as a weak acid. 


Which of the following statements apply to carbonic acid?

(Select all that apply)

It will form a solution with a pH of less than 7

It does not fully ionise to release hydrogen ions

It does fully dissociate to release hydrogen ions

It will form a solution with a pH of more than 7

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Which of these describes the strength of an acid?

The number of hydrogen ions released by the acid molecule

The proportion of acid molecules which dissociate into hydrogen ions

The concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution 

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The concentration of an acid refers to the number of moles of acid molecules per unit of volume.


For example, hydrochloric acid could be 2 mol/dm3, which would mean 2 moles of HCl molecules per dm3 of solution.

True or false? The strength of an acid is the same as its concentration.

True

False

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pH is a measure of the hydrogen ion (H+) concentration of the solution. 


This is NOT always the same as the acid's concentration. 

As the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution increases, what happens to the pH?

The pH decreases

The pH increases

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Diagram of the pH scale ranging from 0 to 14 with a focus on the transition from pH 6 to pH 5.

A solution decreases from pH 6 to pH 5. 


By what factor has the concentration of hydrogen ions increased?

10 x

100 x

1000 x 

10,000 x

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