User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
See also
Extensive Definition
In chemistry, a base is most
commonly thought of as a substance that can accept protons. This refers to the
Brønsted-Lowry theory of acids and bases. Alternate definitions
of bases include electron
pair donors (Lewis), as sources of hydroxide anions (Arrhenius) and
can be (commonly) thought of as any chemical compound that, when
dissolved in water, gives a solution with a pH higher than 7.0.
Examples of simple bases are sodium
hydroxide and ammonia.
Bases can be thought of as the chemical opposite
of acids. A reaction
between an acid and base is called neutralization. Bases and
acids are seen as opposites
because the effect of an acid is to increase the hydronium ion (H3O+) concentration in water,
whereas bases reduce this concentration. Bases react with acids to
produce water and salts (or their solutions).
Definitions
A strong base is a base which hydrolyzes completely, raising the pH of the solution towards 14. Strong bases, like strong acids, attack living tissue and cause serious burns. They react differently to skin than acids do, so while strong acids are corrosive, we say that strong bases are caustic. Superbases are a class of especially basic compounds and non-nucleophilic bases are a special class of strong bases with poor nucleophilicity. Bases may also be weak bases such as ammonia, which is used for cleaning. Arrhenius bases are water-soluble and these solutions always have a pH greater than 7. An alkali is a special example of a base, where in an aqueous environment, hydroxide ions (also viewed as OH-) are donated. There are other more generalized and advanced definitions of acids and bases.The notion of a base as a concept in chemistry
was first introduced by the French chemist
Guillaume François Rouelle in 1754. He noted that acids which
in those days were mostly volatile liquids (like acetic acid)
turned into solid salts only when combined with specific
substances. These substances form a concrete base for the salt and
hence the name.
Properties
Some general properties of bases include:- Bitter taste (opposed to sour taste of acids and sweetness of aldehydes and ketones)
- Slimy or soapy feel on fingers, due to saponification of the lipids in human skin
- Concentrated or strong bases are caustic (corrosive) on organic matter and react violently with acidic substances
- Aqueous solutions or molten bases dissociate in ions and conduct electricity
- Reactions with indicators: bases turn red litmus paper blue and phenolphthalein red
Bases and pH
The pH of (impure) water is a measure of its acidity. In pure water, about one in ten million molecules dissociate into hydronium ions (H3O+) and hydroxide ions (OH−), according to the following equation:- 2H2O(l) → H3O+(aq) + OH-(aq)
The concentration, measured in
molarity (M or moles per
dm³), of the ions is indicated as [H3O+] and [OH−]; their
product is the dissociation
constant of water with and has the value 10−7 M. The
pH is defined as −log [H3O+]; thus, pure water
has a pH of 7. (These numbers are correct at 23 °C and
slightly different at other temperatures.)
A base accepts (removes) hydronium
ions (H3O+) from the solution, or donates hydroxide ions (OH-) to the
solution. Both actions will lower the concentration of hydronium
ions, and thus raise pH. By contrast, an acid donates H3O+ ions to
the solution or accepts OH−, thus lowering pH.
For example, if 1 mole of sodium
hydroxide (40 g) is
dissolved in water to make 1 litre of solution, the concentration
of hydroxide ions becomes
[OH−] = 1 mol/L. Therefore
[H+] = 10−14 mol/L, and
pH = −log 10−14 = 14.
Note that in this calculation, it is assumed that the activity
is equivalent to the concentration, which is not realistic at
concentrations over 0.1 mol dm-3.
The base
dissociation constant or Kb is a measure of basicity. pKb is
the negative log of Kb and related to the pKa by the simple
relationship
pKa + pKb = 14.
Alkalinity is a
measure of the ability of a solution to neutralize acids to the
equivalence points of carbonates or bicarbonates.
Common Bases
Neutralization of acids
When dissolved in water, the strong base sodium
hydroxide decomposes into hydroxide and sodium ions:
- NaOH → Na+ + OH-
and similarly, in water hydrogen
chloride forms hydronium and chloride ions:
- HCl + H2O → H3O+ + Cl-
When the two solutions are mixed, the H3O+ and
OH− ions combine to form water molecules:
- H3O+ + OH- → 2 H2O
If equal quantities of NaOH and HCl are
dissolved, the base and the acid exactly neutralize, leaving only
NaCl, effectively table salt, in
solution.
Weak bases, such as soda or egg white, should be
used to neutralize any acid spills. Neutralizing acid spills with
strong bases, such as sodium
hydroxide or potassium
hydroxide can cause a violent exothermic reaction, and the base
itself can cause just as much damage as the original acid
spill.
Alkalinity of non-hydroxides
Bases are generally compounds that can neutralize an amount of acids. Both sodium carbonate and ammonia are bases, although neither of these substances contains OH− groups. Both compounds accept H+ when dissolved in water:- Na2CO3 + H2O → 2 Na+ + HCO3- + OH-
- NH3 + H2O → NH4+ + OH-
From this, a pH, or acidity, can be
calculated for aqueous solutions of bases. Bases also directly act
as electron-pair donors themselves:
- CO32- + H+ → HCO3-
- NH3 + H+ → NH4+
Carbon can act as a
base as well as nitrogen and oxygen. This occurs typically in
compounds such as butyl
lithium, alkoxides,
and metal amides such as
sodium
amide. Bases of carbon, nitrogen and oxygen without resonance
stabilization are usually very strong, or superbases, which cannot exist
in a water solution due to the acidity of water. Resonance
stabilization, however, enables weaker bases such as carboxylates;
for example, sodium
acetate is a weak
base.
Strong bases
A strong base is a basic chemical compound that is able to deprotonate very weak acids in an acid-base reaction. Compounds with a pKa of more than about 13 are called strong bases. Common examples of strong bases are the hydroxides of alkali metals and alkaline earth metals like NaOH and Ca(OH)2. Very strong bases are even able to deprotonate very weakly acidic C-H groups in the absence of water. Hydroxide compounds in order of strongest to weakest:- Potassium hydroxide (KOH)
- Barium hydroxide (Ba(OH)2)
- Caesium hydroxide (CsOH)
- Sodium hydroxide (NaOH)
- Strontium hydroxide (Sr(OH)2)
- Calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2)
- Lithium hydroxide (LiOH)
- Rubidium hydroxide (RbOH)
The cations of these strong bases appear in the
1st and 2nd groups of the periodic table (alkali and earth alkali
metals).
Group 1 salts of carbanions, amides, and hydrides
tend to be even stronger bases due the conjugate acids, which are
stable hydrocarbons, amines, and water. Usually these bases are
created by adding pure alkali metals such as sodium into the
conjugate acid. They are called superbases and it is not
possible to keep them in water solution, due to the fact they are
stronger bases than the hydroxide ion and as such it will
deprotonate the conjugate acid water. For example the ethoxide ion
(conjugate base of ethanol) in the presence of water will undergo
this reaction.
CH3CH2O- + H2O --> CH3CH2OH + OH-
- Butyl lithium (n-BuLi)
- Lithium diisopropylamide (LDA) (C6H14LiN)
- Sodium amide (NaNH2)
- Sodium hydride (NaH)
Bases as heterogeneous catalysts
Basic substances can be used as insoluble heterogeneous
catalysts for chemical
reactions. Examples are metal oxides such as magnesium
oxide, calcium
oxide, and barium oxide
as well as potassium
fluoride on alumina
and some zeolites. A
great deal of transition
metals make good catalysts, many of which form basic
substances. Basic catalysts have been used for hydrogenations, the
migration of double bonds,
in the
Meerwein-Ponndorf-Verley reduction, the Michael
reaction, and many other reactions.
See also
External links
- Acid-Base equilibrium diagrams, pH calculation and titration curves simulation and analysis - freeware Link
References
basicity in Afrikaans: Basis
basicity in Arabic: قلوي
basicity in Catalan: Base química
basicity in Czech: Zásaditost
basicity in Danish: Base (kemi)
basicity in German: Basen (Chemie)
basicity in Estonian: Alus (keemia)
basicity in Modern Greek (1453-): Βάση
basicity in Spanish: Base (química)
basicity in Esperanto: Bazo (kemio)
basicity in Basque: Base
basicity in French: Base (chimie)
basicity in Korean: 염기
basicity in Hindi: क्षार
basicity in Croatian: Baza (kemija)
basicity in Ido: Bazo
basicity in Indonesian: Basa
basicity in Icelandic: Basi
basicity in Italian: Base (chimica)
basicity in Hebrew: בסיס (כימיה)
basicity in Latin: Alkalium
basicity in Latvian: Sārms
basicity in Lithuanian: Bazė
basicity in Hungarian: Bázis
basicity in Macedonian: База (хемија)
basicity in Malayalam: ക്ഷാരം
basicity in Dutch: Base (scheikunde)
basicity in Japanese: 塩基
basicity in Norwegian: Base
basicity in Norwegian Nynorsk: Base
basicity in Novial: Base
basicity in Occitan (post 1500): Basa
(quimia)
basicity in Low German: Base
basicity in Polish: Zasady
basicity in Portuguese: Base (química)
basicity in Romanian: Bază (chimie)
basicity in Quechua: Llipt'a
basicity in Russian: Химическое основание
basicity in Simple English: Base
(chemistry)
basicity in Slovenian: Baza (kemija)
basicity in Serbian: База (хемија)
basicity in Serbo-Croatian: Baza (hemija)
basicity in Finnish: Emäs
basicity in Swedish: Bas (kemi)
basicity in Thai: เบส (เคมี)
basicity in Vietnamese: Bazơ
basicity in Turkish: Baz
basicity in Ukrainian: Основа (хімія)
basicity in Chinese: 鹽基