WHAT IS BRøNSTED LOWRY THEORY
With the Brønsted-Lowry concept we usually refer to a hydrogen ion as a proton. That is because a proton is all that is left when a hydrogen atom loses an electron to become an ion.
Brønsted and Lowry independently came up with the idea that an acid is an acid because itprovides or donates a proton to something else. When an acid reacts, the proton istransferred from one chemical to another. As will be noted later, the chemical which accepts the proton is a base.
ACID substance that donates hydrogen ions(protons) in a solution
BASE substance that accepts hydrogen ions(protons) in a solution
When an acid dissolves and dissociates in water it gives a proton to the water. Equations to represent this are shown here ( and in example 16 in your workbook). The Brønsted-Lowry view is that the acid (HCl) gives a proton to water to make two ions, one of which is H3O+. H3O+ is called hydronium ion. (By the way a hydronium ion is sometimes called an oxonium ion.) |
HCl + H2O H3O+ + Cl- |
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These equations show a different acid (H2SO4) giving a proton to water. In this case, the product HSO4- still has a proton that can be donated to another water molecule. |
H2SO4 + H2O H3O+ + HSO4- |
HSO4- + H2O H3O+ + SO42- |
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This equation shows HCl giving a proton to a hydroxide ion (OH-) rather than water. |
HCl + OH- H2O + Cl- |
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The first chemical in each of these equations is an acid because they are each giving a proton to something else.
Bases
Note that in order for an acid to act like an acid, there needs to be something for it to react with. There needs to be something to take the proton. There needs to be a base. A base is aproton acceptor. Compare this to the definition that an acid is a proton donor.
Bases are the opposite of acids. Bases are basic because they take or accept protons. Hydroxide ion, for example can accept a proton to form water. Brønsted and Lowry realized that not all bases had to have a hydroxide ion. As long as something can accept a proton it is a base. |
OH- + H+ H2O |
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So anything, hydroxide or not, that can accept a proton is a base under the Brønsted-Lowry definition. The water molecules that accept protons when HCl dissolves in water are acting as bases. |
H2O + HCl H3O+ + Cl- |
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Some additional examples of Brønsted-Lowry bases are shown accepting protons in these equations (which are also shown in example 17 in your workbook). These examples do not show the acids which are providing the protons. |
OH- + H+ H2O |
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Ammonia can accept or react with hydrogen ion to give ammonium ion NH4+. |
NH3 + H+ NH4+ |
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Carbonate ion can accept a hydrogen ion, or accept a proton, to become bicarbonate ion. |
CO32- + H+ HCO3- |
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Also, water molecules, as mentioned before, can act as a base by accepting protons. |
H2O + H+ H3O+ |
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Hydroxide, ammonia, carbonate and water are all Brønsted-Lowry bases.
Be sure to note the distinction between ammonia and ammonium. NH3 is ammonia and NH4+is ammonium. They sound very much the same and their formulas are very similar, but their chemical properties are quite different. They are different because one has one more proton than the other. Ammonia is a base and ammonium is an acid. We'll take up another aspect of their relationship when we consider conjugate pairs.
Some phenomena that are readily explained using the Brønsted-Lowry concept are acid-base reactions (explained as proton transfer reactions), conjugate pair relationships, and amphoterism.
CH3COOH ( aq) + NH3 (aq) NH4 + (aq) + CH3COO - (aq) When Bronsted and Lowry examined this reaction, they defined vinegar as an acid because it donated a hydrogen ion to the ammonia. They defined ammonia as a base because it accepted this hydrogen ion.
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