로그인

A polyprotic acid contains more than one ionizable hydrogen and undergoes a stepwise ionization process. If the acid dissociation constants of the ionizable protons differ sufficiently from each other, then the titration curve for such polyprotic acid generates a distinct equivalence point for each of its ionizable hydrogens. Therefore, titration of a diprotic acid results in the formation of two equivalence points, whereas the titration of a triprotic acid results in the formation of three equivalence points on the titration curve.

Carbonic acid, H2CO3, is an example of a weak diprotic acid. The first ionization of carbonic acid yields hydronium ions and bicarbonate ions in small amounts.

First ionization:

Eq1

The bicarbonate ion can also act as an acid. It ionizes and forms hydronium ions and carbonate ions in even smaller quantities.

Second ionization:

Eq2

The Ka1 is larger than the Ka2 by a factor of 104. Therefore, when H2CO3 is titrated with a strong base like NaOH, it produces two distinct equivalence points for each ionizable hydrogen.

Phosphoric acid, a triprotic acid, ionizes in three steps:

First ionization:

Eq3

Second ionization:

Eq4

Third ionization:

Eq5

When H3PO4 is titrated with a strong base like KOH, it produces three equivalence points for each ionizable hydrogen. However, as HPO42− is a very weak acid, the third equivalence point is not easily discernible on the titration curve.

This text is adapted from Openstax, Chemistry 2e, Section 14.5: Polyprotic Acids.

Tags

Polyprotic AcidIonizable ProtonsKaDissociation ConstantSulfurous AcidTitration CurveStrong BaseSodium HydroxideHydrogen Sulfite IonsEquivalence PointPHHalf equivalence PointSecond Ionizable ProtonDiprotic AcidNeutralization StepTriprotic Phosphoric Acid

장에서 16:

article

Now Playing

16.9 : Titration of a Polyprotic Acid

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

95.2K Views

article

16.1 : Common Ion Effect

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

40.4K Views

article

16.2 : Buffers

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

162.7K Views

article

16.3 : Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

67.4K Views

article

16.4 : Calculating pH Changes in a Buffer Solution

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

52.0K Views

article

16.5 : Buffer Effectiveness

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

48.0K Views

article

16.6 : Titration Calculations: Strong Acid - Strong Base

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

28.5K Views

article

16.7 : Titration Calculations: Weak Acid - Strong Base

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

42.9K Views

article

16.8 : Indicators

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

47.4K Views

article

16.10 : Solubility Equilibria

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

50.5K Views

article

16.11 : Factors Affecting Solubility

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

32.7K Views

article

16.12 : Formation of Complex Ions

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

22.8K Views

article

16.13 : Precipitation of Ions

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

27.2K Views

article

16.14 : Qualitative Analysis

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

19.6K Views

article

16.15 : Acid-Base Titration Curves

Acid-base and Solubility Equilibria

124.5K Views

JoVE Logo

개인 정보 보호

이용 약관

정책

연구

교육

JoVE 소개

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. 판권 소유