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How do you determine which of the following is the weakest base?
A. H-
B. Na2O
C. N3-
D. OH-
I know that hydrides and metal oxides are strong bases, but why is OH- a weaker base than N3-?
Just being nitpicky here: but I believe N3- is an azide with a -1 charge, not a nitrogen ion with a -3 charge.
OP--the short answer is the periodic trends will predict basicity. Base strength increases going up and to the left on the periodic table. So nitrogen will be more basic than oxygen.
Long answer: oxygen is more electronegative than nitrogen. So O will be more stable with the negative charge than nitrogen. Therefore, the azide, being unhappy with the negative charge, wants to pick up a proton more than the hydroxide. So, azide is more basic. In general, comparing basicity within the same row, you take electronegativity into consideration.
Let's also compare hydroxide (OH-) and bisulfide (SH-). Which is more basic? Well, even though O is more electronegative than S, sulfur is much BIGGER than oxygen. The bigger size of sulfur allows it to accomodate an extra electron better than oxygen. In other words, the negative charge on S is more stable because it has MORE ROOM (in a sense, it is more delocalized). Because SH- is more stable than OH-, the hydroxide will want to pick up a proton and become neutral and it will be more basic. In general, comparing basicity within the same column, you take size into consideration.
This explains why we have this periodic trend.
Since azide has resonance forms, it can delocalize those electrons better. This makes azide more stable. The amide does not any resonance forms to delocalize the charge. Since the azide is more stable (resonance delocalizes the electrons), it does not want to pick up a proton as much as the amide. So the NH2- is more basic (less stable) than the N3-.
Another example is why acetate is less basic than ethoxide. CH3COO- has two resonance forms but EtO- has zero. So acetate is more stable.
OP--the short answer is the periodic trends will predict basicity. Base strength increases going up and to the left on the periodic table. So nitrogen will be more basic than oxygen.
I think you mean acid..
Yes yes.. I misread 😳, you're right.. thank you..
So hydride should be more basic than azide..
BEANS. Look at a periodic table and write a "B" on the top left, "E" on the top right, "A" on the bottom right, and an "N" and "S" on the bottom left. All those increase in a direction towards that letter.
B=Basicity
E=Electronegativity, ionization Energy, and Electron affinity
A=Acidity
N=Nucleophilicity
S=Size, Shielding
Hope this helps 🙂
Then H- IS more basic than N3 - ?
The BEANS trick is meant for analyzing "similar" compounds. For instance for pKa values, HI < HBr < HCl < HF, or HF < H2O < NH3 < CH4. Comparing azide to hydride does not neatly fit into these trends.
But to answer your question, of course H- is more basic than N3 -. Azide has resonance structures. It can distribute that annoying minus charge amongst many resonance structures and many atoms and therefore is much happier than poor H- which is small and can't distribute that negative charge anywhere. Who is more itchy to grab a proton? Hydride, by a long shot.
HN3, hydrazoic acid, has a pKa of 4.6. So it's a weak acid by inorganic chemistry standards. It's conjugate base, N3-, is also weak. H2, on the other hand, is so weak an acid that it is difficult to even dredge up a pKa value for the molecule. It's a weaker acid than water (pKa 15.7). It's conjugate base, H-, is a strong base.
H- + H2O --> H2 + OH-
So certainly H- is a much stronger base than N3-.
Thanks. Btw how long did it take you to walk from Mexico to Canada? 😀
Considering the Lewis structure of N3- has two nitrogen atoms hence there are greater number of electron donors available in the molecule , hence it is a better donor of lone pair than OH ions. Also the shape of the azide molecule is linear and it provides this molecule a better approach, hence it acts as a better nucleophile as well
Thus the -OH ions are weak bases as compared to the azide ions
Considering the Lewis structure of N3- has two nitrogen atoms hence there are greater number of electron donors available in the molecule , hence it is a better donor of lone pair than OH ions. Also the shape of the azide molecule is linear and it provides this molecule a better approach, hence it acts as a better nucleophile as well
Thus the -OH ions are weak bases as compared to the azide ions
Just being nitpicky here: but I believe N3- is an azide with a -1 charge, not a nitrogen ion with a -3 charge.