onebytwo said:
Mg(OH)2 is considered a strong base, right?
If so, that means it dissociates completely in solution (or almost completely).
But Mg(OH)2 has a very limited solubility, so why is it referred to as a strong base?
any help is appreciated - thankyou
This is a very important question, so i thought i'd better clear this up.
- A substance must be soluble in water for it to ionise (i.e. form its contituent ions).
- A substance that is completely soluble in water will completely ionises .
- the solubility rules for hydroxides are as follow: [All common metals hydroxides are INSOLUBLE, except those of Group 1 and the larger members of Group 2, i.e. Ca2+, Ba2+ and Sr2+.
- From the above rule, we learnt that Mg(OH)2 is INSOLUBLE in water. As such it will NOT ionise to from it constituent ions.
- Therefore Mg(OH)2 is NOT a strong base, since it is NOT soluble in water.
- Therefore, All Group 1 and Group 2 hydroxides are strong bases except Li(OH)2 and Mg(OH)2.
EXTENSION:
Solubility of an ionic compound is directly related to the strength of the ionic bonds .
The strength of an ionic bond is related to the charge of the ions and the distance between the ionic radii.
The strength of an ionic bond will
- increases as the charge of the ions increases
- decreases SIGNIFICANTLY as the distance between the ions increases
So a simple reason why the magnesium hydroxide is more insoluble that calcium hydroxide is that the magnesium ion is relatively smaller in size than the calcium ion, and hence froms a much stronger ionic bond with the hydroxide ion. The stronger this bond, the harder it is to overcome and so the compound wil not ionise easily in water.
The same person that posted this question, posted another question in a different thread enquiring as to why HF(aq) is a weak acid and HCl(aq) is a strong acid. The same theory explained here is behind this phenomena as well.
HF(aq) is a weak acid, because the ionic bond here is stronger due the small size of the F- ion.
This extension theory here is BEYOND the scope of the BoS syllabus.
Cheers,
George