Which of these is the strongest acid? "HCl", "H"_3"PO"_4, "CH"_3"COOH"

2 Answers
Mar 4, 2017

"HCl" is the only strong acid in this selection of acids.

The highest ["H"^(+)] comes from the acid, "HA", that dissociates into "H"^(+) and "A"^(-) (its conjugate base) the most:

"HA"(aq) + "H"_2"O"(l) rightleftharpoons "H"_3"O"^(+)(aq) + "A"^(-)(aq)

(note that "H"_3"O"^(+) and "H"^(+) are different representations for equivalent species.)

By definition, a strong acid dissociates pretty much completely, so it must give the most "H"^(+) into solution.

This can be quantified by their acid dissociation constants, K_a:

"HCl": K_a ~~ 10^7

"H"_3"PO"_4: K_(a1) = 6.9 xx 10^(-3)

"CH"_3"COOH": K_a = 1.76 xx 10^(-5)

Based on the values of the K_a's, which do you think is the weakest acid (considering only the first proton)?

Mar 4, 2017

Because HCl is the strongest acid...........

Explanation:

When we talk of the strength of an acid, we refer to the following equilibrium reaction in water:

HX(aq) rightleftharpoons H^(+) + X^-

The further the equilibrium lies to the right hand side as we face the page, the STRONGER is the acid. (Sometimes we represent H^+ as the hydronium ion, H_3O^+, i.e. protonated water:

HX(aq) + H_2O(l) rightleftharpoons H_3O^+ + X^-)

For the LOWER hydrogen halides, HCl, HBr, HI, (but not for HF), the given equilibrium lies almost quantitatively to the right. Thus 1*mol*L^-1 solutions of HCl, HBr, are almost quantitative in H^+, i.e. H^(+)=1.0*mol*L^-1

For acetic acid and phosphoric acid, the equilibrium would not go to completion:

H_3"CCO"_2H(aq) rightleftharpoons H_3"CCO"_2^(-) +H^+

Mind you phosphoric acid has a lower pK_(a1) than acetic acid.