Study Vault
All PostsFlashcardsResourcesAI Chat
  1. Home
  2. /↳All Posts
  3. /↳Chemistry
  4. /↳Acids and Bases
Study VaultStudy Vault

Free, comprehensive study notes for CSEC students.

matthewlloydw@gmail.com

Navigate

  • Home
  • All Posts
  • Flashcards
  • Resources
  • AI Chat

Sciences

  • Biology
  • Chemistry
  • Physics
  • Additional Mathematics
  • Mathematics
  • Information Technology

Humanities

  • English Language
  • English Literature
  • Spanish
  • Economics
  • Principles of Business
  • Principles of Accounting

Community

  • Contributors
  • Changelog
  • Suggest a Feature
  • My Suggestions
  • Bookmarks

© 2026 Matthew Williams. Made with other contributors for all.

Chemistry

Acids and Bases

PDF
Matthew Williams
|May 15, 2026|7 min read
AcidsBasesCSEC ChemistryNeutralisationPaper 01Paper 02pHSection A

Definitions of acids, bases, alkalis, and acid anhydrides; types of oxides; the pH scale and indicators; strength of acids and alkalis; reactions of acids with metals, carbonates, hydrogen carbonates, and bases; reaction of bases with ammonium salts; and acids in living systems.

Acid-base chemistry explains digestion, industrial processes, soil management, and dozens of everyday observations. The key is understanding the definitions precisely — particularly the distinction between a base and an alkali — and being able to write balanced equations for every type of acid reaction.

Definitions

An acid is a proton donor — a substance that releases hydrogen ions (H⁺) in aqueous solution. Acids have replaceable hydrogen atoms that can be displaced by metals or neutralised by bases.

A base is a proton acceptor — a substance that can neutralise an acid. Bases are usually metal oxides or metal hydroxides.

An alkali is a soluble base. When dissolved in water, it produces hydroxide ions (OH⁻). All alkalis are bases, but not all bases are alkalis — only the soluble ones.

An acid anhydride is a non-metal oxide that reacts with water to produce an acid:

SO3(g)+H2O(l)→H2SO4(aq)\text{SO}_3\text{(g)} + \text{H}_2\text{O(l)} \rightarrow \text{H}_2\text{SO}_4\text{(aq)}SO3​(g)+H2​O(l)→H2​SO4​(aq)

Exam Tip

A common exam error: saying all bases are alkalis. Only soluble bases dissolve in water to form OH⁻. Copper(II) oxide is a base but is not an alkali because it does not dissolve in water.

Types of Oxides

Whether something is acidic or basic is closely linked to the type of oxide it forms. Many common acids and bases are simply non-metal or metal oxides that have reacted with water.

Oxide typeDefinitionExamples
Acidic oxideNon-metal oxide; reacts with water to form an acid, or with a base to form a salt and waterCO₂, SO₂, SO₃, NO₂
Basic oxideMetal oxide; reacts with an acid to form a salt and waterCaO, MgO, CuO, Fe₂O₃
Amphoteric oxideReacts with both acids and basesAl₂O₃, ZnO
Neutral oxideReacts with neither acid nor baseCO, NO, H₂O

The pH Scale

Knowing whether something is an acid or a base is qualitative. The pH scale gives a number.

The pH scale runs from 0 to 14 and measures how acidic or alkaline a solution is.

pH rangeNatureExamples
0–6Acidic (lower pH = stronger acid)Stomach acid ~pH 1, vinegar ~pH 3, rainwater ~pH 5.6
7NeutralPure water
8–14Alkaline (higher pH = stronger alkali)Baking soda ~pH 9, bleach ~pH 13

Indicators change colour with pH. Litmus turns red in acid and blue in alkali. Universal indicator shows a spectrum of colours across the full range. Phenolphthalein is colourless in acid and pink in alkali. Methyl orange is red in acid and yellow in alkali.

Strength of Acids and Alkalis

pH tells you how acidic a solution is. Strength explains why: two acids at the same concentration can have quite different pH values depending on how much they ionise.

Strength depends on the degree of ionisation — how completely the substance breaks into ions in water.

Strong acids ionise completely in water:

HCl(aq)→H+(aq)+Cl−(aq)\text{HCl(aq)} \rightarrow \text{H}^+\text{(aq)} + \text{Cl}^-\text{(aq)}HCl(aq)→H+(aq)+Cl−(aq)

Weak acids ionise only partially — most molecules remain intact:

CH3COOH(aq)⇌H+(aq)+CH3COO−(aq)\text{CH}_3\text{COOH(aq)} \rightleftharpoons \text{H}^+\text{(aq)} + \text{CH}_3\text{COO}^-\text{(aq)}CH3​COOH(aq)⇌H+(aq)+CH3​COO−(aq)

Strong acidWeak acid
Degree of ionisationCompletePartial
pH (same concentration)LowerHigher
ExamplesHCl, H₂SO₄, HNO₃Ethanoic acid, carbonic acid (H₂CO₃)

NaOH and KOH are strong alkalis (fully ionise); ammonia solution (NH₃(aq)) is a weak alkali.

Reactions of Acids

With the definitions in place, the next question is what acids actually do. There are five reaction types to know.

With Metals

Dilute acids react with metals above hydrogen in the reactivity series, producing a salt and hydrogen:

acid+metal→salt+hydrogen\text{acid} + \text{metal} \rightarrow \text{salt} + \text{hydrogen}acid+metal→salt+hydrogen

Mg(s)+H2SO4(aq)→MgSO4(aq)+H2(g)\text{Mg(s)} + \text{H}_2\text{SO}_4\text{(aq)} \rightarrow \text{MgSO}_4\text{(aq)} + \text{H}_2\text{(g)}Mg(s)+H2​SO4​(aq)→MgSO4​(aq)+H2​(g)

Zn(s)+2HCl(aq)→ZnCl2(aq)+H2(g)\text{Zn(s)} + 2\text{HCl(aq)} \rightarrow \text{ZnCl}_2\text{(aq)} + \text{H}_2\text{(g)}Zn(s)+2HCl(aq)→ZnCl2​(aq)+H2​(g)

Test for hydrogen: a burning splint produces a squeaky pop.

With Carbonates and Hydrogen Carbonates

acid+carbonate→salt+water+carbon dioxide\text{acid} + \text{carbonate} \rightarrow \text{salt} + \text{water} + \text{carbon dioxide}acid+carbonate→salt+water+carbon dioxide

CaCO3(s)+2HCl(aq)→CaCl2(aq)+H2O(l)+CO2(g)\text{CaCO}_3\text{(s)} + 2\text{HCl(aq)} \rightarrow \text{CaCl}_2\text{(aq)} + \text{H}_2\text{O(l)} + \text{CO}_2\text{(g)}CaCO3​(s)+2HCl(aq)→CaCl2​(aq)+H2​O(l)+CO2​(g)

NaHCO3(s)+HCl(aq)→NaCl(aq)+H2O(l)+CO2(g)\text{NaHCO}_3\text{(s)} + \text{HCl(aq)} \rightarrow \text{NaCl(aq)} + \text{H}_2\text{O(l)} + \text{CO}_2\text{(g)}NaHCO3​(s)+HCl(aq)→NaCl(aq)+H2​O(l)+CO2​(g)

Test for CO₂: bubble through limewater — turns milky white.

Applications: antacid tablets contain NaHCO₃ or CaCO₃ to neutralise excess stomach acid; baking powder uses this reaction to release CO₂ in baking.

With Bases (Neutralisation)

acid+base→salt+water\text{acid} + \text{base} \rightarrow \text{salt} + \text{water}acid+base→salt+water

HCl(aq)+NaOH(aq)→NaCl(aq)+H2O(l)\text{HCl(aq)} + \text{NaOH(aq)} \rightarrow \text{NaCl(aq)} + \text{H}_2\text{O(l)}HCl(aq)+NaOH(aq)→NaCl(aq)+H2​O(l)

H2SO4(aq)+CuO(s)→CuSO4(aq)+H2O(l)\text{H}_2\text{SO}_4\text{(aq)} + \text{CuO(s)} \rightarrow \text{CuSO}_4\text{(aq)} + \text{H}_2\text{O(l)}H2​SO4​(aq)+CuO(s)→CuSO4​(aq)+H2​O(l)

The net ionic equation for all strong acid-strong alkali neutralisations is:

H+(aq)+OH−(aq)→H2O(l)\text{H}^+\text{(aq)} + \text{OH}^-\text{(aq)} \rightarrow \text{H}_2\text{O(l)}H+(aq)+OH−(aq)→H2​O(l)

Reaction of Bases with Ammonium Salts

Bases also react with ammonium salts, not just acids. This is important in agriculture: lime and ammonium fertiliser should never be applied to soil together, because the reaction releases ammonia gas and wastes the nitrogen.

When a base is heated with an ammonium salt, ammonia gas is released:

Ca(OH)2(s)+2NH4Cl(s)→ΔCaCl2(s)+2H2O(l)+2NH3(g)\text{Ca(OH)}_2\text{(s)} + 2\text{NH}_4\text{Cl(s)} \xrightarrow{\Delta} \text{CaCl}_2\text{(s)} + 2\text{H}_2\text{O(l)} + 2\text{NH}_3\text{(g)}Ca(OH)2​(s)+2NH4​Cl(s)Δ​CaCl2​(s)+2H2​O(l)+2NH3​(g)

Test for ammonia: turns damp red litmus paper blue.

Exam Tip

Lime (calcium hydroxide) and ammonium fertiliser must never be applied to soil at the same time — the reaction releases ammonia gas and wastes the nitrogen in the fertiliser.

Acids in Living Systems

Acids show up well outside the laboratory, in foods, organisms, and animal defence.

AcidLocation/sourceRole
Ascorbic acid (vitamin C)Citrus fruits, green vegetablesAntioxidant; essential vitamin
Methanoic acid (formic acid)Ants, bee stings, nettlesDefence mechanism
Lactic acidMuscles during exerciseProduced during anaerobic respiration
Ethanoic acid (acetic acid)VinegarFood preservation (low pH inhibits bacterial growth)
Citric acidCitrus fruitsFlavouring; removes rust stains

Applications of neutralisation:

  • Toothpaste is mildly alkaline and neutralises acids produced by bacteria in the mouth, protecting tooth enamel.
  • Lime (calcium hydroxide) is added to acidic soil to raise the pH and improve conditions for plant growth.
  • Antacid tablets neutralise excess hydrochloric acid in the stomach to relieve indigestion.
Previous in syllabus order
The Mole Concept
Next in syllabus order
Salts and Titration