Acids and Bases


Book Description

Did you know that cola is an acid? And your saliva is a base? Young readers will learn about common acids and bases from lemon juice to ammonia. Through vivid examples and exciting illustrations, this book will eagerly explore these important chemical compounds.




Acids and Bases


Book Description

Learn about acids and bases, chemical components of the natural world that play key roles in medicine and industry.




Acids and Bases


Book Description

Discusses acids, bases, and alkalis and how they are used.




Acids, Bases, and Solutions


Book Description

The activities in this book explain elementary concepts in the study of chemistry, including acids, bases, solvents, solutions, crystals, and more! General background information, suggested activities, questions for discussion, and answers are included.




Acids and Bases


Book Description

Introduction to the chemistry of acids and bases. Acid molecules have an "H" group (one hydrogen atom) and can be sour. Bases have an "OH" group (an oxygen and a hydrogen atom) and can be slippery. "H" and "OH" groups give acids and bases different properties. 24 pp. Colorful illustrations. Reading Level 1-3, Interest Level 2-5.




Solid Acids and Bases


Book Description

Solid Acids and Bases: Their Catalytic Properties reviews developments in the studies of acidic and basic properties of solids, including the efficacy and special characteristics of solid acid and base catalysts. This book discusses the determination of basic and acidic properties on solid surfaces and relationship between acid strength and acid amount. The structure and acid-base properties of mixed metal oxides and correlation between acid-base properties and catalytic activity and selectivity are also deliberated. This publication is useful to professional chemists and graduate students in the fields of organic, inorganic and physical chemistry, petroleum chemistry and catalysis, including readers interested in the acidic and basic properties on solid surfaces.







pKa Prediction for Organic Acids and Bases


Book Description

Many chemists and biochemists require to know the ionization constants of organic acids and bases. This is evident from the Science Citation Index which lists The Determination of Ionization Constants by A. Albert and E. P. Serjeant (1971) as one of the most widely quoted books in the chemical literature. Although, ultimately, there is no satisfactory alternative to experimental measurement, it is not always convenient or practicable to make the necessary measure ments and calculations. Moreover, the massive pK. compilations currently available provide values for only a small fraction of known or possible acids or bases. For example, the compilations listed in Section 1. 3 give pK. data for some 6 000--8 000 acids, whereas if the conservative estimate is made that there are one hundred different substituent groups available to substitute in the benzene ring of benzoic acid, approximately five million tri-substituted benzoic acids are theoretically possible. Thus we have long felt that it is useful to consider methods by which a pK. value might be predicted as an interim value to within several tenths of a pH unit using arguments based on linear free energy relationships, by analogy, by extrapolation, by interpolation from existing data, or in some other way. This degree of precision may be adequate for many purposes such as the recording of spectra of pure species (as anion, neutral molecule or cation), for selection of conditions favourable to solvent extraction, and for the interpretation of pH-profiles for organic reactions.







Acids and Bases


Book Description

This book seeks to enhance our understanding of acids and bases by reviewing and analysing their behaviour in non-aqueous solvents. The behaviour is related where possible to that in water, but correlations and contrasts between solvents are also presented.