Acid Base Reactions

By James Ashenhurst

Acid Base Reactions In Organic Chemistry

Last updated: October 10th, 2024 |

An Introduction to Acid Base Reactions In Organic Chemistry

Now that we’ve described how to figure out where the electrons are in a molecule,  the factors that stabilize negative charge and positive charge, and gone into the curved arrow formalism for reactions, we’re ready to start going into more detail on some of the key reactions in organic chemistry.

Let’s start with acid base reactions.

summary acid base reactions conjugate acid conjugate base stronger acid weaker conjugate base

Table Of Contents

  1. The Four Components Of Every Acid Base Reaction
  2. What Makes An Acid-Base Reaction Favorable? (Hint: It Has To Do With The Stability Of The Conjugate Base)
  3. The Acidity Of A Molecule Is Directly Related To The Ability Of The Conjugate Base To Stabilize Negative Charge
  4. Any Factor Which Stabilizes The Conjugate Base Will Lead To An Increase In Acidity
  5. Acid-Base Reactions That Go From A Less Stable (i.e. More Basic) Anion To A More Stable (i.e. Less Basic) Anion Are Energetically Favorable
  6. Notes

1. The Four Components Of Every Acid Base Reaction In Organic Chemistry

In the first post I made introducing acid base reactions, I just said that the first order of business is just to figure out the bonds that form and the bonds that break, and recognize the four components.  Like this.

an-acid-base-reaction-that-works-hf-plus-nanh2-giving-nh3-and-naf-form-and-break-h
This is the pattern of an acid-base reaction in organic chemistry: we’re swapping a hydrogen between two atoms. Actually, since the hydrogen doesn’t take any electrons with it when this occurs, we’re technically swapping H+ (a proton). We have names for each of the species involved:

  • The molecule which loses H+  is called the acid 
  • The molecule which gains H+ is called the base
  • After gaining H+, the base becomes the conjugate acid
  • After losing H+, the acid becomes the conjugate base.

2. What Makes An Acid-Base Reaction Favorable? (Hint: It Has To Do With The Stability Of The Conjugate Base)

Although this helps us recognize the pattern, it doesn’t really help us answer “why?”. For instance, why does the above reaction proceed well, but the reaction below does not? After all, it’s also technically an acid-base reaction.

acid-base-reaction-that-does-not-proceed-is-nh3-plus-naf-giving-hf-and-nanh2

Now we can circle back and start addressing this important question.

Let’s start with some simple examples. Here are four sample acid-base reactions. If you read about the stability of negative charge earlier, you should be able to gauge which of these will be more favorable and which are less favorable. (Feel free to ignore the backwards arrow for now)

four-sample-acid-base-reactions-hf-h2o-h2o-to-h3o-nh3-to-nh2-and-ch4-to-ch3

3. The Acidity Of A Molecule Is Directly Related To The Ability Of The Conjugate Base To Stabilize Negative Charge

Let’s look at this and think about it:

  • In each reaction, the molecule on the far left is the acid, which is donating a proton to water (the base), forming H3O(+) [the conjugate acid] and an anion (the conjugate base).
  • Notice how the charges change: in each case, the conjugate base is more negative than the acid, and the conjugate acid is more positive than the base.This is always true for acid-base reactions. 
  • Since every reaction here involves H2O and H3O(+), the only difference between each reaction is the identity of the acid and the conjugate base.
  • All else being equal, a neutral molecule is more stable than its conjugate base (nature seeks to minimize charges). The differences in stability between the neutral molecules (on the left) is trivial compared to the difference in stability between the charged molecules (on the right).
  •  Therefore, understanding the factors that stabilize negative charge is going to be key to understanding which of these are most favorable and which are least favorable.

If you think back to the factors that stabilized negative charge, as we went from left to right across the periodic table we got this trend:

stability-of-negative-charge-increases-going-from-left-to-right-along-periodic-table-ch3-is-least-stable-f-is-most-stableOf these four species, fluoride ion (F-) is the most stable.

Therefore, of all the four species listed in the reactions above, we should expect H-F to be the most likely to give up its proton to form its conjugate base, F(-). In other words, H-F is the most acidic because its conjugate base is best able to stabilize negative charge.

Of these four species, CH3(-) is the least stable.

Therefore of all the four species listed we should expect H-CH3 to be the least likely to give up its proton to form its conjugate base, CH3(-). In other words, H-CH3 is the least acidic. 

4. Any Factor Which Stabilizes The Conjugate Base Will Lead To An Increase In Acidity

Let’s repeat this, in different form.

  • The acidity of a species is directly related to the stability of its conjugate base.

Therefore any factor which stabilizes the conjugate base (specifically, the electron pair of the conjugate base) will result in an increase in acidity.

What are some of the factors which stabilize negative charge and would therefore lead to an increase in acidity? There are seven: charge, electronegativity, polarizability, resonance, inductive effects, orbitals, and aromaticity. (See article – Seven Factors Which Stabilize Negative Charge in Organic Chemistry)

Every trend that leads to a stabilization of negative charge is going to have a direct impact on acidity. More specifically, stabilizing negative charge will make the conjugate acid more acidic.

5. Acid-Base Reactions That Go From A Less Stable (i.e. More Basic) Anion To A More Stable (i.e. Less Basic) Anion Are Energetically Favorable

So for the reaction at the very top, we’re going from a less stable anion (H2N) to a more stable anion (F). This is energetically favorable, like water flowing downhill. So this reaction proceeds.

predicting-acid-base-reactions-is-about-knowing-which-anions-are-more-stable-and-less-stable

The reverse reaction would involve going from a more stable anion (F) to a less stable anion (H2N). This is energetically unfavorable, and does not proceed satisfactorily.

rule-for-acid-base-reactions-is-stronger-acid-plus-stronger-base-gives-weaker-acid-and-weaker-base

Of course this is still pretty vague at the moment – we can actually be a lot more exact about this, as we’ll see. In the next post, though, we’ll look at these exact same reactions from a slightly different angle.

Next Post:  The Stronger The Acid, The Weaker The Conjugate Base


Notes

Comments

Comment section

7 thoughts on “Acid Base Reactions In Organic Chemistry

  1. Why does water act as an acid or as a base? If Kw of water is 1×10-14, wouldn’t the formation of H3O+ and OH- be highly unfavorable?

  2. I read this and realized that the past month of Organic I has been one big lesson on the factors that stabilize a negative charge. I kind of had a sense that electrons and their charge was the most important factor of organic, but reading this post has allowed me to step back and understand the bigger picture. Thank you!

  3. For the last example, do you mean the reaction is unfavorable b/c you’re going from a MORE stable anion to a LESS stable anion?

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