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Acids and Bases
Acid-Base Properties of Salts
Chemistry Textbooks Boundless Chemistry Acids and Bases Acid-Base Properties of Salts
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Concept Version 10
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Salts that Produce Basic Solutions

When dissolved in water, a basic salt yields a solution with pH greater than 7.0.

Learning Objective

  • Distinguish basic salts from non-basic salts


Key Points

    • In acid-base chemistry, salts are ionic compounds that result from the neutralization reaction of an acid and a base.
    • Basic salts contain the conjugate base of a weak acid, so when they dissolve in water, they react with water to yield a solution with pH greater than 7.0.

Term

  • basic salt

    the product of the neutralization of a strong base and a weak acid; its anion is the conjugate base of the weak acid


Full Text

In acid-base chemistry, a salt is defined as the ionic compound that results from a neutralization reaction between an acid and a base. As such, salts are composed of cations (positively charged ions) and anions (negative ions), and in their unsolvated, solid forms, they are electrically neutral (without a net charge). The component ions in a salt can be inorganic; examples include chloride (Cl−), the organic acetate (CH3COO−), and monatomic fluoride (F−), as well as polyatomic ions such as sulfate (SO42−).

The Reaction of a Basic Salt in Water

There are several varieties of salts, and in this section we will consider basic salts. What makes a basic salt basic? It is due to the fact that the anion in the salt is the conjugate base of a weak acid. For a generalized anion B-, the net ionic reaction is:

$B^-(aq)+H_2O(l)\rightleftharpoons BH(aq)+OH^-(aq)$

An example of a basic salt is sodium bicarbonate, NaHCO3. The bicarbonate ion is the conjugate base of carbonic acid, a weak acid. Therefore, it reacts with water in the following fashion:

$HCO_3^-(aq)+H_2O(l)\rightleftharpoons H_2CO_3(aq)+OH^-(aq)$

Because it is capable of deprotonating water and yielding a basic solution, sodium bicarbonate is a basic salt.

Other examples of basic salts include:

  • Calcium carbonate (CaCO3)
  • Sodium acetate (NaOOCCH3)
  • Potassium cyanide (KCN)
  • Sodium sulfide (Na2S)

Notice that for all of these examples, the anion is the conjugate base of a weak acid (carbonic acid, bisulfate (second dissociation step of sulfuric acid), acetic acid, hydrocyanic acid, hydrogen sulfide).

Conjugate Bases of Weak vs. Strong Acids

Keep in mind that a salt will only be basic if it contains the conjugate base of a weak acid. Sodium chloride, for instance, contains chloride (Cl-), which is the conjugate base of HCl. But because HCl is a strong acid, the Cl- ion is not basic in solution, and it isn't capable of deprotonating water.

Sodium Bicarbonate

Because the bicarbonate ion is the conjugate base of carbonic acid, a weak acid, sodium bicarbonate will yield a basic solution in water.

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