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Indicators and the pH scale

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visibility 111update 7 months agobookmarkshare

In this topic you will:

  • learn how to tell an acid from an alkali
  • learn how to make and use indicators
  • use the pH scale to find out more about acids and alkalis.
 

Key words

  • indicator
  • litmus
  • neutral
  • pH scale
  • universal indicator
 

Which is which?

These three containers all look the same. One contains water, one contains acid and one contains alkali.

Three identical beakers containing clear liquids

You can tell them apart when you add a few drops of an indicator. An indicator turns one colour in an acid and a different colour in an alkali. Red cabbage juice can be used as an indicator.

Red cabbage juice being added to three beakers

Red cabbage indicator turns acids red in acids, blue in water and yellow in alkalis. So, you now know what was in each beaker.

Beakers showing red, blue, and yellow colors labeled as hydrochloric acid, water, and sodium hydroxide

Indicators can be made from the brightly coloured berries, flowers and other parts of plants. These include:

  • red cabbage
  • blackcurrant
  • beetroot
 

Questions

1. How does an indicator show whether a substance is an acid or an alkali?
Show Answer

An indicator shows different colours in acids, alkalis, and neutral solutions. This colour change helps identify the type of substance.

2. What is the colour change when red cabbage juice is added to lemon juice?
Show Answer

Red cabbage juice turns red when added to lemon juice because lemon juice is acidic.

 

Litmus

Litmus is a very common indicator. It is a dye. You usually use litmus paper, which is made by soaking absorbent paper in litmus solution.

Litmus turns red in acids. Litmus turns blue in alkalis. Litmus turns purple when it is in a neutral substance. A neutral substance is one that is neither acid nor alkali.

Litmus turns purple in water. Water is neutral. This means water is neither an acid nor an alkali.

This table shows the colours litmus goes in some substances and what those colours mean.

Substance Litmus colour Type of substance
hydrochloric acid red acid
sodium hydroxide blue alkali
water purple neutral
lemon juice red acid
calcium hydroxide blue alkali
 

Questions

3. What does litmus do when it is added to sodium hydroxide?
Show Answer

Litmus turns blue when added to sodium hydroxide because it is an alkali.

4. What colour does litmus change to in an acid?
Show Answer

Litmus turns red in an acid.

5. Is water an acid, an alkali or neutral? Give the reason for your answer.
Show Answer

Water is neutral because litmus turns purple in it, and it is neither acidic nor alkaline.

 

Think Like a Scientist

Making and Using Your Own Indicator Solution

In this task you will make your own indicator solution and use it to test various chemicals in the laboratory.

You will need: some plant material, such as red cabbage or beetroot, a knife and cutting board, a pestle and mortar, two dropper pipettes, test tubes and a test-tube rack, safety glasses, a range of laboratory chemicals, ethanol

Safety
Make sure you are careful and read all the hazard warning labels. Ethanol is flammable.

Step 1. Cut up the plant material.

Step 2. Place some of the material into a pestle and mortar and crush it.

Step 3. Use a pipette to add a little ethanol.

Step 4. Crush the plant material again.

Step 5. Use a different pipette to transfer some of the liquid from the mortar to a test tube.

Step 6. Use the liquid you collect to test some everyday liquids and laboratory chemicals.

Step 7. Make a table to record the chemicals you test and the colours you see.

 

Self-Assessment

Compare your indicator with litmus. Does your indicator turn the same colour as litmus? Does it clearly show which is an acid and which is an alkali?

 

Other indicators

Litmus and other simple indicators just show if a substance is an acid or an alkali. Universal indicator shows how acidic or alkaline a substance is. The acidity or alkalinity of a substance is one of its chemical properties.

Universal indicator can change to many different colours. Universal indicator is made up of a mixture of different indicators.

Type of substance Colour of universal indicator
strongly acid red
weakly acid yellow
neutral green
weakly alkaline blue
strongly alkaline purple
These strips of paper were soaked in universal indicator solution and then dried. The papers were then dipped into different liquids.

The strength of acids and alkalis is measured on the pH scale.

Universal indicator changes colour and shows the pH of a substance. The pH of a substance is one of the chemical properties of that substance.

A colour chart for universal indicator showing the pH scale.

 

Questions

6. What does the pH scale measure?
Show Answer

The pH scale measures how acidic or alkaline a substance is.

7. What is the pH of a neutral solution?
Show Answer

The pH of a neutral solution is 7.

8. A liquid has a pH of 1. What type of liquid is it?
Show Answer

It is a strongly acidic liquid.

9. What range of pH do strong alkalis have?
Show Answer

Strong alkalis have a pH between 12 and 14.

10. What colour does universal indicator turn in a liquid with a pH of 9?
Show Answer

It turns blue, indicating a weak alkali.

11. Which colours does universal indicator turn in acids?
Show Answer

It turns red in strong acids and yellow in weak acids.

 

Think Like a Scientist

Investigating the pH of Different Substances

In this task you will test various laboratory chemicals with universal indicator to measure the pH and what type of chemical it is.

You will need: universal indicator papers, a range of liquids, test tubes and a test tube rack, safety glasses

Safety
Read any hazard warning labels and take care not to spill substances on your skin. Make sure you know what to do if you do spill anything.

Step 1. Put on your safety glasses.

Step 2. Pour a small amount of liquid from a bottle of liquid into a clean test tube.

Step 3. Test with universal indicator.

Step 4. Record the colour of the indicator and the pH.

Step 5. Record the type of each liquid, such as strongly or weakly acidic, neutral, strongly or weakly alkaline. You could use a table like this one:

Liquid Colour of universal indicator pH Type of liquid
lemon juice red 4 weakly acidic
salt water green    
soap solution   8 weakly alkaline
cola drink yellow 4  

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