1 normal acid or base (1N): Difference between revisions

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Biologists are sometimes confused by the non-standard[http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/checklist.html] chemical unit of '''normality N'''. N refers in general to salts while it's most commonly used in the context of acid and bases.
Biologists are sometimes confused by the non-standard[http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/checklist.html] chemical unit of '''normality N'''. N refers in general to salts while it's most commonly used in the context of acid and bases. N can refere to either the cation or the anion in a hydrolysis. In the context of acid and bases it is generally assumed that N refers to the proton or the hydroxide ion.


* 1 M (mol/l) = 1 N for an acid that releases 1 proton* when dissolved in water, e.g. HCL (*monoprotic)
* 1 M (mol/l) = 1 N for an acid that releases 1 proton* when dissolved in water, e.g. HCL (*monoprotic)
* 1 M (mol/l) = ''2'' N for an acid that releases 2 protons*, e.g. H<sub>2</sub>SO<sub>4</sub> (*diprotic)
* 1 M (mol/l) = ''2'' N for an acid that releases 2 protons*, e.g. H<sub>2</sub>SO<sub>4</sub> (*diprotic)


By the way, ''molarity M'' is also a non-standard unit[http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/checklist.html]. Expressing this explicitly as mol/L or mol/m<sup>3</sup> is clearer to readers less versed in current biological customs.
For example, some antigen retrieval methods use 2N hydrochloric acid to open up the tissue to allow antibody binding. This could be a nucleotide analogue, as BrdU or dUTP-TMR in cell proliferation of apoptosis assays.
 
{| {{table}} OR border=1 cellpadding=5 cellspacing=0 OR {{sorttable}}
! style="background:lightgrey"|acid/case
! style="background:lightgrey"|molecular weight
! style="background:lightgrey"|N vs M
|-
| HCl -> <font color=blue>1·H<sup>+</sup></font> + Cl<sup>-</sup>
| 36.5 g/mol
| 1N = 1M = 36.5g/L
|-
| H<sub>2</sub>SO<sub>4</sub> -> <font color=blue>2·H<sup>+</sup></font> + SO<sub>4</sub><sup>2-</sup>
| 98 g/mol
| 2N = 1M = 98g/L
|-
| NaOH -> Na<sup>+</sup> + <font color=blue>1·OH<sup>-</sup></font>
| 40 g/mol
| 1N = 1M = 40g/L
|}
 
== 1N, 2N HCl ==
1N HCl
* 8.3 ml fuming HCl (37% v/v = ~12N = ~12M)
* 91.7 ml H<sub>2</sub>O
 
2N HCl, see also [http://www.ihcworld.com/_protocols/epitope_retrieval/hcl.htm]
* 16.5 ml fuming HCl (37% v/v = ~12N = ~12M)
* 83.5 ml H<sub>2</sub>O
 
== Molarity (M) also a non-standard unit ==
 
For the nitpickers, ''molarity M'' is also a non-standard unit[http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/checklist.html]. Expressing this explicitly as mol/L or mol/m<sup>3</sup> is clearer to readers less versed in current biological customs.


==See also==
==See also==
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concentration#Normality Normality section of Concentration page at the Wikipedia]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concentration#Normality Normality section of Concentration page at the Wikipedia]
* [http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/units.html International standard units, SI units]
* [http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/units.html International standard units, SI units]
* [http://www.histosearch.com/histonet/Dec03A/RE.HistonetnormalsolutionA.html Example student question & answer]
[[Category:Chemical]]
[[Category:Material]]
[[Category:Acid]]

Latest revision as of 14:05, 27 February 2012

Biologists are sometimes confused by the non-standard[1] chemical unit of normality N. N refers in general to salts while it's most commonly used in the context of acid and bases. N can refere to either the cation or the anion in a hydrolysis. In the context of acid and bases it is generally assumed that N refers to the proton or the hydroxide ion.

  • 1 M (mol/l) = 1 N for an acid that releases 1 proton* when dissolved in water, e.g. HCL (*monoprotic)
  • 1 M (mol/l) = 2 N for an acid that releases 2 protons*, e.g. H2SO4 (*diprotic)

For example, some antigen retrieval methods use 2N hydrochloric acid to open up the tissue to allow antibody binding. This could be a nucleotide analogue, as BrdU or dUTP-TMR in cell proliferation of apoptosis assays.

acid/case molecular weight N vs M
HCl -> 1·H+ + Cl- 36.5 g/mol 1N = 1M = 36.5g/L
H2SO4 -> 2·H+ + SO42- 98 g/mol 2N = 1M = 98g/L
NaOH -> Na+ + 1·OH- 40 g/mol 1N = 1M = 40g/L

1N, 2N HCl

1N HCl

  • 8.3 ml fuming HCl (37% v/v = ~12N = ~12M)
  • 91.7 ml H2O

2N HCl, see also [2]

  • 16.5 ml fuming HCl (37% v/v = ~12N = ~12M)
  • 83.5 ml H2O

Molarity (M) also a non-standard unit

For the nitpickers, molarity M is also a non-standard unit[3]. Expressing this explicitly as mol/L or mol/m3 is clearer to readers less versed in current biological customs.

See also