Conjugate Bases of NH2-: Identifying

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The discussion focuses on identifying the conjugate bases of NH2-. Participants clarify that NH2- can react with water, producing NH3 and OH-. The key point is that when NH2- donates a proton, it becomes NH-, which is its conjugate acid. The conversation emphasizes the importance of accurately tracking charges and proton counts in acid-base reactions. Ultimately, the correct conjugate base of NH2- is NH-, as it differs by one proton.
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Homework Statement


Indicate the conjugate bases of the following:

NH2-
NH2-

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


This is the only information given. Can I assume that these species react with water? The ionic signs indicate that they are bases, but are they the conjugate bases?
 
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What are the definitions of acid and conjuagte base? Can you write acid-base reaction equation involving one of given ions as a reactant and the other as a product?

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methods
 
When species donates a proton, it becomes the conjugate base; when a species gains a proton, it becomes a conjugate acid...

NH2- + H2O -> NH3 + OH-


NH2- becomes a conjugate acid
 
Amy-Lee said:
When species donates a proton, it becomes the conjugate base;

What does NH{_2}{^-} become when it donates a proton?
 
phaseshifter said:
what does nh{_2}{^-} become when it donates a proton?

nh ?
 
Amy-Lee said:
nh ?
Close, but still missing something.

What will the charge be?
 
PhaseShifter said:
Close, but still missing something.

What will the charge be?

negative
 
So is the conjugate base of NH2- N3-?
 
No, acid and conjugate base must differ by exactly one proton. And PhseShifter didn't ask about positive/negative, but about exact value. You wrote nh (meaning NH) - but what is the exact charge?

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  • #10
Borek said:
No, acid and conjugate base must differ by exactly one proton. And PhseShifter didn't ask about positive/negative, but about exact value. You wrote nh (meaning NH) - but what is the exact charge?

NH-
 
  • #11
Oops, sorry, somehow I missed track of hydrogens and charge :blushing:

Amy-Lee said:
So is the conjugate base of NH2- N3-?

That was right. I misread it as NH2-, not NH2-.

Still, nh was wrong - should be NH2-. Treat my mistake as a warning why you should never ignore capitalization and charge - it adds to the confusion.

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  • #12
I will, thank you so much for all your help and patience.
 
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