Acids and bases
The pH scale
How acidic or alkaline a substance is (the pH of the substance) can be measured using the pH scale, a continuous range that stretches from below 0 to above 14. Most common pH values occur between 0 and 14.
Acids have a pH of less than 7.
Alkalis have a pH more than 7.
Water and neutral solutions have a pH of exactly 7.
The pH is a measure of the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution.
Forming acids and alkalis
Alkalis are soluble bases. An alkaline solution can be formed when a metal oxide is dissolved in water. An acidic solution can be formed when a non-metal oxide is dissolved in water.
For example, magnesium oxide dissolves to form alkaline solutions.
\(Magnesium\,oxide + water \to magnesium\,hydroxide\)
\(MgO + H_2^{}O \to Mg(OH)_2^{}\)
Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide however, will dissolve to form acidic solutions.
\(Sulfur\,dioxide + water \to sulfurous\,acid\)
\(SO_2^{} + H_2^{}O \to H_2^{}SO_3^{}\)
\(Nitrogen\,dioxide + water \to nitric\,acid\)
\(NO_2^{} + H_2^{}O \to HNO_3^{}\)
Soluble metal oxides produce alkalis when dissolved in water.
Soluble non-metal oxides produce acids when dissolved in water.
Question
What will carbon dioxide produce when it is dissolved in water?
Carbon dioxide is a non-metal oxide. It produces carbonic acid when is dissolves in water.
\(carbon\,dioxide + water \to carbonic\,acid\)
\(CO_2^{} + H_2^{}O \to H_2^{}CO_3^{}\)
Watch this video to see the procedure for an experiment investigating the effect of carbon dioxide on pH.