Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2023

First exams 2025

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Acid-Base Indicators (HL) (HL IB Chemistry)

Revision Note

Philippa

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Philippa

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Chemistry

Acid-Base Indicators

  • An acid-base indicator is a weak acid which dissociates to give an anion of a different colour
  • Consider a weak acid, HIn:

HIn (aq)   ⇌ H+ (aq) + In– (aq)

colour 1        ⇌         colour 2

  • HIn and its conjugate base In are different colours
  • The colour of the solution depends on the relative concentrations of the two species
    • If the solution is acidic, the above equilibrium will be shifted to the left and more HIn will be present
      • Colour 1 will dominate
    • If the solution is alkaline, the above equilibrium will shift to the right and more In will be present
      • Colour 2 will dominate
  • The colour does not change suddenly at a certain pH, but changes gradually over a pH range
  • The colour of the indicator depends on the ratio of [HIn] to [In]
  • The colour of the indicator depends on the pH of the solution
  • The pH at which these transitions will occur depends on the K of the indicator
    • K subscript straight a space equals space fraction numerator open square brackets straight H to the power of plus close square brackets open square brackets In to the power of minus close square brackets over denominator open square brackets HIn close square brackets end fraction
  • The endpoint of the reaction is where there is a balance between [HIn] and [In]. At this point these two concentrations are equal:
    • K subscript straight a space equals space fraction numerator stretchy left square bracket straight H to the power of plus stretchy right square bracket stretchy left square bracket In to the power of minus stretchy right square bracket over denominator stretchy left square bracket HIn stretchy right square bracket end fraction equals space open square brackets straight H to the power of plus close square brackets
  • Taking negative logs of both sides
    • pKa  = pH
  • This means the pKof an indicator is the same as the pH of its endpoint
  • The colour change for most indicators takes place over a range of pH = pKa ± 1

Weak bases as indicators

  • An indicator can also be a weak base:

             BOH (aq) ⇌ B+ (aq) + OH- (aq) 

colour 1    ⇌     colour 2

  • For such indicators:
    • Colour 1 is observed in alkaline conditions
    • Colour 2 is observed in acidic conditions

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Philippa

Author: Philippa

Philippa has worked as a GCSE and A level chemistry teacher and tutor for over thirteen years. She studied chemistry and sport science at Loughborough University graduating in 2007 having also completed her PGCE in science. Throughout her time as a teacher she was incharge of a boarding house for five years and coached many teams in a variety of sports. When not producing resources with the chemistry team, Philippa enjoys being active outside with her young family and is a very keen gardener.