Open main menu

Alkali

Revision as of 20:06, 6 January 2019 by NRJC (talk | contribs) (Key Stage 4)

Key Stage 3

Meaning

An alkali is a Metal Hydroxide solution that has a pH more than 7.

Noun: Alkali
Adjective: Alkaline

About Alkalis

Alkalis can be an Irritant, Harmful or Corrosive and should be handled with care.
Alkalis can be used to neutralise acids.
Alkalis can be concentrated or dilute.
Alkalis can be weak or strong which depends on the type of alkali and the concentration.
Alkalis turn Litmus paper blue.
Alkalis turn Universal Indicator blue, indigo and purple depending on the strength of the alkali.

Some common Alkalis you should know:

Key Stage 4

Meaning

An alkali is basic compound which dissolves in water to form OH- ions making a solution with pH greater than 7.

About Alkalis

Alkalis are bases in solution which form Hydroxide ions.
When a baseic compound dissolves in water a Hydroxide ion becomes dissociated from either the basic compound or from a water molecule. That Hydroxide ion is free to move separately in the solution.
The Hydroxide ions in an alkali will donate electrons to Hydrogen ions to form water. This is a neutralisation reaction.
The strength of an alkali is measured on the pH scale. The more Hydroxide ions in a solution the lower the pH.

Examples

Metal Hydroxides form Hydroxide ions in water.

NaOH(aq) → Na+(aq)+OH-(aq)
KOH(aq) → K+(aq)+OH-(aq)
Mg(OH)2(aq) → Mg+2(aq)+2OH-(aq)
Ca(OH)2(aq) → Ca+2(aq)+2OH-(aq)
Al(OH)3(aq) → Al+3(aq)+3OH-(aq)

Metal Oxides react with water to form Metal Hydroxides.

Na2O(s) + H2O(l) → 2Na+(aq)+2OH-(aq)
K2O(s) + H2O(l) → 2K+(aq)+2OH-(aq)
MgO(s) + 2H2O(l) → Mg+2(aq)+2OH-(aq)
CaO(s) + 2H2O(l) → Ca+2(aq)+2OH-(aq)
Al2O3(s) + 3H2O(l) → 2Al+3(aq)+6OH-(aq)

Ammonia also reacts with water to produce hydroxide ions:

NH3O(aq) + H2O(l) → NH4+(aq)+OH-(aq)