Can Acid-Base Reactions Occur in the Solid State?

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The discussion centers on the possibility of acid-base reactions occurring in solid and gaseous states, particularly regarding the formation of pure substances from molecular salts. The correct answer to a homework question is H4NF, which can exist as a pure substance due to a small extent of reaction between its components. Participants express confusion about the teacher's definition of "pure substance" and the implications of solid-state reactions, noting that while reactions are typically thought to occur in solution, solid acids and bases can also react under certain conditions. Examples such as the reaction of ammonia with hydrogen chloride in the gaseous phase and the behavior of solid acids and bases suggest that solid-state reactions can indeed happen, albeit slowly. The conversation highlights the complexity of acid-base definitions and the nuances of chemical reactions in different states.
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Homework Statement



Which of the following CAN be made as a pure substance?

Choices are a list of molecular salts.

Homework Equations



According to my teacher the salt cannot be made as a pure substance if the components undergo a large extent acid-base reaction.

The correct choice was H_{4}NF (this can exist as a pure substance).

The Attempt at a Solution



Wait, what?

Can acid-base reactions occur in the solid-state or in the gaseous state? Is this what the problem is implying? I don't see any issue sticking solid ammonium to solid fluoride as long as there is no water present as a solvent.

I thought acid-base reactions occur only in solution.

The correct answer according to my teacher is H_{4}NF and the rationale is that the below reaction is small extent (note that the product acid is stronger than the reactant acid). Thus H_{4}NF can exist as a pure substance.

H_{4}N^{+} + F^{-} \leftrightharpoons H_{3}N + HF; Extent: small
 
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Fluorine is a gas at STP. IDK where you get solid fluorine from. Hydrogen fluoride HF is also a gas, as is ammonia NH3.
 
A/B reactions can occur in the gaseous state?

I think I put solid down because some of the salts were solids at STP (I believe). But you're right, fluorine and the other things I listed are gaseous at STP.
 
No idea what the question is about, no idea what your teacher means, but the most important problem is: no idea what definition of "pure substance" is at use here.

Do you remember substances listed and exact wording of the problem?
 
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That is one question. Do you see what he's saying?
 
Also Hen is short for...
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My bet is that is a poor question.

I can understand the logic behind ammonium carbonate - it decomposes relatively easy, so it will be always contaminated by ammonia, water and carbon dioxide. However, I am not convinced other molecules listed don't suffer from other problems - whenever you see hydrated cations (like Fe(H2O)63+ or Al(H2O)63+) in the presence of other ligands (like SO42- or F-) you can expect some water molecules to be replaced by these other ligands, and the solution to contain a mixture of complexes. I am not convinced solid would be free of them.
 
Borek said:
My bet is that is a poor question.

I can understand the logic behind ammonium carbonate - it decomposes relatively easy, so it will be always contaminated by ammonia, water and carbon dioxide. However, I am not convinced other molecules listed don't suffer from other problems - whenever you see hydrated cations (like Fe(H2O)63+ or Al(H2O)63+) in the presence of other ligands (like SO42- or F-) you can expect some water molecules to be replaced by these other ligands, and the solution to contain a mixture of complexes. I am not convinced solid would be free of them.

We haven't gotten to ligands yet. We're only concerned about acid/base reactions. Can such reactions occur in the solid-state? Or gaseous state?
 
Ammonia reacting with hydrogen chloride is definitely an acid-base reaction* and they react in the gaseous phase. Actually it is not that difficult, just take open bottles of concentrated ammonia and concentrated hydrochloric acid and put them close to each other - as both gases are volatile they will mix in the air and you will see fog appearing from nowhere.

In the solid phase... I suspect that mixing some solid acids (like benzoic) and some solid bases (say, NaOH) will soon yield a wet salt. Won't be initially a fast process, and the water produced will soon make it a reaction in solution.

*especially if we take into account all possible acid and base definitions.
 
  • #10
Borek said:
Ammonia reacting with hydrogen chloride is definitely an acid-base reaction* and they react in the gaseous phase. Actually it is not that difficult, just take open bottles of concentrated ammonia and concentrated hydrochloric acid and put them close to each other - as both gases are volatile they will mix in the air and you will see fog appearing from nowhere.

In the solid phase... I suspect that mixing some solid acids (like benzoic) and some solid bases (say, NaOH) will soon yield a wet salt. Won't be initially a fast process, and the water produced will soon make it a reaction in solution.

*especially if we take into account all possible acid and base definitions.

Very interesting. I should have used my common sense as well and realized that yes indeed acid-base reactions can occur in the solid state. I remember a former chemistry teacher who managed to destroy a brand-new classroom installation of tile flooring by storing a potent acid in a metal tub over the weekend.

Also, my teacher mentioned smelling salts as an example of a solid-state acid/base reaction, since smelling salts are just ammonium carbonate. The two undergo a large extent A/B reaction and create a potent smell.

H_{4}N^{+} + CO_{3}^{2-} \leftrightharpoons H_{3}N + HOCO_{3}^{-}

What are all the possible A/B definitions? I know of three: Arrhenius, Bronsted-Lowry, and Lewis. And also "hard" and "soft," I suppose, so four.
 
  • #11
Qube said:
What are all the possible A/B definitions? I know of three: Arrhenius, Bronsted-Lowry, and Lewis. And also "hard" and "soft," I suppose, so four.

Hard and soft AKA Pearson theory of acids and bases, yes, that would be four.

But there were more - Usanowich theory, Ebert & Konopik theory, and few others I don't remember. They just never gained any popularity.
 
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