Electrolytes
- Strong electrolytes: Strong acids, strong bases, salts
- Weak electrolytes: Weak acids and weak bases
- Non-electrolytes: Urea, sucrose, etc.
Dissociation of Weak Electrolytes
Weak electrolytes are not completely ionised in solution.
Degree of dissociation (α):
α = (Number of molecules dissociated as ions) / (Total molecules dissolved)
Acid & Base Dissociation Constants
Acid dissociation constant (Ka):
Ka = [H₃O⁺][A⁻] / [HA]
Base dissociation constant (Kb):
Kb = [BH⁺][OH⁻] / [BOH]
Stronger the acid/base → larger the Ka / Kb value
Ostwald’s Dilution Law
α = √(K / C)
Degree of dissociation increases with dilution.
α = √(Ka / C) , α = √(Kb / C)
Acid–Base Concepts
Arrhenius Concept:
- Acid → Produces H⁺ in water
- Base → Produces OH⁻ in water
Brønsted–Lowry Concept:
- Acid → Proton donor
- Base → Proton acceptor
Lewis Concept:
- Acid → Electron pair acceptor
- Base → Electron pair donor
Conjugate Acid–Base Pair
Pairs differing by one proton (H⁺).
pH, pOH & Ionic Product of Water
Kw = [H₃O⁺][OH⁻] = 1 × 10⁻¹⁴ (at 25°C)
pH = −log[H₃O⁺]
pOH = −log[OH⁻]
pH + pOH = 14
Buffer Solutions
Acidic buffer: Weak acid + salt of strong base
Basic buffer: Weak base + salt of strong acid
Henderson Equation:
pH = pKa + log([Salt] / [Acid])
pOH = pKb + log([Salt] / [Base])
Hydrolysis of Salts
Weak acid + strong base:
pH = 7 + ½ (pKa + log C)
Strong acid + weak base:
pH = 7 − ½ (pKb + log C)
Strong acid + strong base: No hydrolysis
Solubility Product (Ksp)
Ksp = [A⁺]ᵐ[B⁻]ⁿ
- Ionic product = Ksp → Saturated
- Ionic product < Ksp → Unsaturated
- Ionic product > Ksp → Precipitation
Relation Between Solubility & Ksp
For AB type: S = √Ksp
For AB₂ type: S = (Ksp / 4)¹ᐟ³
For AB₃ type: S = (Ksp / 27)¹ᐟ⁴
For A₃B₂ type: S = (Ksp / 108)¹ᐟ⁵
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Last modified: December 14, 2025
