Modern definitions are concerned with the fundamental chemical reactions common to all acids. Most acids encountered in everyday life are
aqueous solutions, or can be dissolved in water, so the Arrhenius and Brønsted–Lowry definitions are the most relevant. The Brønsted–Lowry definition is the most widely used definition; unless otherwise specified, acid–base reactions are assumed to involve the transfer of a proton (H+) from an acid to a base. Hydronium ions are acids according to all three definitions. Although alcohols and amines can be Brønsted–Lowry acids, they can also function as
Lewis bases due to the lone pairs of electrons on their oxygen and nitrogen atoms.
Arrhenius acids In 1884,
Svante Arrhenius attributed the properties of acidity to hydrogen cations (H+), later described as
protons or
hydrons. An
Arrhenius acid is a substance that, when added to water, increases the concentration of H+ ions in the water. Chemists often write H+(
aq) and refer to the hydrogen cation when describing acid–base reactions but the free hydrogen nucleus, a
proton, does not exist alone in water, it exists as the
hydronium ion (H3O+) or other forms (H5O2+, H9O4+). Thus, an Arrhenius acid can also be described as a substance that increases the concentration of
hydronium ions when added to water. Examples include molecular substances such as hydrogen chloride and acetic acid. An Arrhenius
base, on the other hand, is a substance that increases the concentration of
hydroxide (OH−) ions when dissolved in water. This decreases the concentration of hydronium because the ions react to form H2O molecules: :H3O + OH ⇌ H2O(liq) + H2O(liq) Due to this equilibrium, any increase in the concentration of hydronium is accompanied by a decrease in the concentration of hydroxide. Thus, an Arrhenius acid could also be said to be one that decreases hydroxide concentration, while an Arrhenius base increases it. In an acidic solution, the concentration of hydronium ions is greater than 10−7
moles per liter. Since pH is defined as the negative logarithm of the concentration of hydronium ions, acidic solutions thus have a pH of less than 7.
Brønsted–Lowry acids , a
weak acid, donates a proton (hydrogen ion, highlighted in green) to water in an equilibrium reaction to give the
acetate ion and the
hydronium ion. Red: oxygen, black: carbon, white: hydrogen. While the Arrhenius concept is useful for describing many reactions, it is also quite limited in its scope. In 1923, chemists
Johannes Nicolaus Brønsted and
Thomas Martin Lowry independently recognized that acid–base reactions involve the transfer of a proton. A
Brønsted–Lowry acid (or simply Brønsted acid) is a species that donates a proton to a Brønsted–Lowry base. Brønsted–Lowry acid–base theory has several advantages over Arrhenius theory. Consider the following reactions of
acetic acid (CH3COOH), the
organic acid that gives vinegar its characteristic taste: : : Both theories easily describe the first reaction: CH3COOH acts as an Arrhenius acid because it acts as a source of H3O+ when dissolved in water, and it acts as a Brønsted acid by donating a proton to water. In the second example CH3COOH undergoes the same transformation, in this case donating a proton to ammonia (NH3), but does not relate to the Arrhenius definition of an acid because the reaction does not produce hydronium. Nevertheless, CH3COOH is both an Arrhenius and a Brønsted–Lowry acid. Brønsted–Lowry theory can be used to describe reactions of
molecular compounds in nonaqueous solution or the gas phase.
Hydrogen chloride (HCl) and ammonia combine under several different conditions to form
ammonium chloride, NH4Cl. In aqueous solution HCl behaves as
hydrochloric acid and exists as hydronium and chloride ions. The following reactions illustrate the limitations of Arrhenius's definition: • H3O + Cl + NH3 → Cl + NH(aq) + H2O • HCl(benzene) + NH3(benzene) → NH4Cl(s) • HCl(g) + NH3(g) → NH4Cl(s) As with the acetic acid reactions, both definitions work for the first example, where water is the solvent and hydronium ion is formed by the HCl solute. The next two reactions do not involve the formation of ions but are still proton-transfer reactions. In the second reaction hydrogen chloride and ammonia (dissolved in
benzene) react to form solid ammonium chloride in a benzene solvent and in the third gaseous HCl and NH3 combine to form the solid.
Lewis acids A third, only marginally related concept was proposed in 1923 by
Gilbert N. Lewis, which includes reactions with acid–base characteristics that do not involve a proton transfer. A
Lewis acid is a species that accepts a pair of electrons from another species; in other words, it is an electron pair acceptor. Brønsted acid–base reactions are proton transfer reactions while Lewis acid–base reactions are electron pair transfers. Many Lewis acids are not Brønsted–Lowry acids. Contrast how the following reactions are described in terms of acid–base chemistry: : In the first reaction a
fluoride ion, F−, gives up an
electron pair to
boron trifluoride to form the product
tetrafluoroborate. Fluoride "loses" a pair of
valence electrons because the electrons shared in the B—F bond are located in the region of space between the two atomic
nuclei and are therefore more distant from the fluoride nucleus than they are in the lone fluoride ion. BF3 is a Lewis acid because it accepts the electron pair from fluoride. This reaction cannot be described in terms of Brønsted theory because there is no proton transfer. The second reaction can be described using either theory. A proton is transferred from an unspecified Brønsted acid to ammonia, a Brønsted base; alternatively, ammonia acts as a Lewis base and transfers a lone pair of electrons to form a bond with a hydrogen ion. The species that gains the electron pair is the Lewis acid; for example, the oxygen atom in H3O+ gains a pair of electrons when one of the H—O bonds is broken and the electrons shared in the bond become localized on oxygen. Depending on the context, a Lewis acid may also be described as an
oxidizer or an
electrophile. Organic Brønsted acids, such as acetic, citric, or oxalic acid, are not Lewis acids. They dissociate in water to produce a Lewis acid, H+, but at the same time, they also yield an equal amount of a Lewis base (acetate, citrate, or oxalate, respectively, for the acids mentioned). This article deals mostly with Brønsted acids rather than Lewis acids. ==Dissociation and equilibrium==