The Arrhenius Theory of Acids and Bases
In 1884, the Swedish chemist Svante Arrhenius proposed two specific classifications of compounds, termed acids and bases. When dissolved in an aqueous solution, certain ions were released into the solution. An Arrhenius acid is a compound that increases the concentration of H+ ions that are present when added to water. These H+ ions form the hydronium ion (H3O+) when they combine with water molecules. This process is represented in a chemical equation by adding H2O to the reactants side.
HCl(aq)→H+(aq)+Cl−(aq)
HCl(aq)→H(aq)++Cl(aq)−
In this reaction, hydrochloric acid (HClHCl) dissociates completely into hydrogen (H+) and chlorine (Cl-) ions when dissolved in water, thereby releasing H+ ions into solution. Formation of the hydronium ion equation:
HCl(aq)+H2O(l)→H3O+(aq)+Cl−(aq)
HCl(aq)+H2O(l)→H3O(aq)++Cl(aq)−
The Arrhenius theory, which is the simplest and least general description of acids and bases, includes acids such as HClO4 and Hbr and bases such as NaOHNaOH or Mg(OH)2Mg(OH)2. For example the complete dissociation of HBrHBr gas into water results generates free H3O+H3O+ ions.
HBr(g)+H2O(l)→H3O+(aq)+Br−(aq)
HBr(g)+H2O(l)→H3O(aq)++Br(aq)−
This theory successfully describes how acids and bases react with each other to make water and salts. However, it does not explain why some substances that do not contain hydroxide ions, for example F−F− and NO−2NO2−, can make basic solutions in water. The Brønsted-Lowry definition of acids and bases addresses this problem.
An Arrhenius base is a compound that increases the concentration of OH- ions that are present when added to water. The dissociation is represented by the following equation:
NaOH(aq)→Na+(aq)+OH−(aq)
NaOH(aq)→Na+(aq)+OH−(aq)
In this reaction, sodium hydroxide (NaOH) disassociates into sodium (Na+) and hydroxide (OH-) ions when dissolved in water, thereby releasing OH- ions into solution.