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Two Types of Bases

For bases, the concentration of OH must exceed the concentration of H+ in the solution. This imbalance can be created in two different ways.

First, the base can be a hydroxide, which merely dissociates to yield hydroxide ions:




where M represents the cation, usually a metal. The most familiar bases are such hydroxides. (See Table 1 .)
TABLE 1 Common Bases

Base

Formula

Ions

Sodium hydroxide

NaOH

Na+

OH

Potassium hydroxide

KOH

K+

OH

Calcium hydroxide

Ca(OH)2

Ca2+

2OH

Aqueous ammonia

NH3 (aq)

OH

The second type of base acts by extracting a hydrogen ion from a water molecule, leaving a hydroxide ion:




An example of this second type of base that is not a hydroxide can be an ammonia molecule in water (aqueous ammonia):




Ammonia acts as a base by stripping a proton from a water molecule, leaving an increased OH concentration. Notice in the equilibrium reaction that and NH3 are a conjugate acid-base pair, related by transferring a single proton.

Alternatively, the base may be a particular kind of negative ion with a high attraction for a hydrogen ion:




In 1923, the English chemist Thomas Lowry and the Danish chemist Johannes Brønsted defined an acid and base in another way. An acid is a substance that can donate a proton, and a base is a substance that can accept a proton.

  • Problem 1: The bicarbonate ion may serve as either a Brønsted-Lowry acid or base. When it acts as an acid, what is its conjugate base? When it behaves as a base, what is its conjugate acid?

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