arrhenius-can act as an acid or a base, water is an example
"A" is the conjugate base and "X" is the conjugate acid.
Bronsted-lowry: acid-electron pair acceptor, base-electron pair donor.
Lewis: acid-proton donor, base-proton acceptor
I was taught:
Arrhenius- acid: increases conc. of H
3O
+(aq). base: increases conc. of OH
-(aq)Brønsted-Lowry- acid: proton donor. base: proton acceptor.
Lewis- acid: electron pair acceptor. base: electron pair donor.
AngelShare, all your equations are correct. Which bit of them don't you understand? Why its an equilibrium, why they lose/gain protons?
The A and the X are just used to represent the rest of the molecule, so A could equal -Cl, so HA would be HCl and A
- (Cl
-) is formed when HCl dissociates in water (A could also be -OSO
3H, -ONO
2, -OCOCH
3 etc.). In the same way, X can be used to represent something like Na, so when NaOH dissociates in water, X
+ (Na
+) is formed (X can also be K etc.).
I would rather use the equations HA + H
2O --> H
3O
+ + A
- for acids and X + H
2O --> XH
+ + OH
- (or something along those lines) for bases (that way X can represent NH
3, C
5H
5N etc.).