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Question
Give a brief account of the acidic nature of the oxoacids of chlorine.
Very Long Answer
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Solution
- Chlorine forms four oxoacids: hypochlorous (HOCl), chlorous (HClO2), chloric (HClO3), and perchloric acid (HClO4).
- Acid strength increases with the oxidation state of chlorine or the number of oxygen atoms: HOCl < HClO2 < HClO3 < HClO4.
- This is because more oxygen atoms stabilise the conjugate base (anion) by dispersing the negative charge through resonance.
- The greater the stability of the anion formed after losing a proton, the stronger the acid.
- For the same oxidation state, acid strength decreases with increasing atomic number of the halogen (Cl > Br > I).
- The \[\ce{H - O}\] bond polarity influences acidity; a more polar \[\ce{H - O}\] bond breaks easily to release H+, making the acid stronger.
- Thus, perchloric acid (HClO4) is the strongest acid among the chlorine oxoacids due to the highest oxidation state and anion stability.
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