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Pauling's rules

These are two empirical rules which predict the strength of mononuclear oxoacids. I'm not sure why they are so commonly taught to undergrads - since I presume modern wavefunction software could make more advanced predictions.

1. For the oxoacid OpE(OH)q, pKa ≈ 8 – 5p
2. The successive pKa values of polyprotic acids (those with q > 1), increase by 5 units for
each successive proton transfer.

It should be obvious why oxo groups increase acidity, they can delocalize charge on the anion by resonance:


This allows us to rationalize why the acidities of chloro oxoacids decrease in the order HOCl4 > HClO3 > HClO2 > HClO. Likewise for H2SO4 > H2SO3 and HNO3 > HNO2.

One good use of these rules is to notice structural anomalies. For example, if you dissolve carbon dioxide in water to make carbonic acid, you will find an empirical pKa of 6.4 - but the rules predict a pKa of 3.


The mistake is in assuming that all of the CO2 dissolved in a sample of water exists as carbonic acid. In reality, only 1-2% of dissolved carbon dioxide exists in carbonic acid form. The pure pKa is 3.6 when this difference is taken into account.

Many non-metal oxides, and some metal oxides, do not fully become their acidic form when dissolved in water. Deviation from Pauling's rules can help us detect that.

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