Year 10 Science · Unit 2 · Lesson 5

Acids, Bases and the Environment

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Learning Goals

Because… chain

Fill in the missing effects. Each cause leads to the next step in ocean acidification.

CO₂ emissions increase (burning fossil fuels)
CO₂ dissolves in ocean water
Carbonic acid releases H⁺ ions
Ocean pH falls; carbonate ions less available
Coral and shell organisms cannot form CaCO₃

Overall outcome for the Great Barrier Reef:

Real-world context

Research published by the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) in 2023 reports that the Great Barrier Reef's average surface water pH has fallen from 8.2 (pre-industrial) to approximately 8.1 today, and models project a further fall to 7.9 by 2100 under a high-emission scenario. Coral calcification rates, the speed at which corals build their calcium carbonate skeletons, have already declined by 14% compared to 1990 levels in some monitored reef systems.

(a) Explain the chemical reaction that occurs when CO₂ dissolves in seawater to form carbonic acid. Write a word equation and describe what happens to the H⁺ ions that are released.

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(b) Explain why a pH drop from 8.2 to 7.9 threatens coral calcification. Your answer must link the chemistry of lower pH to the availability of carbonate ions (CO₃²⁻) needed to build CaCO₃ skeletons.

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1. Catalytic converters in cars reduce nitrogen oxide (NOₓ) emissions. Explain how fitting catalytic converters to all cars in Australia would help reduce acid rain damage to building materials such as limestone. Connect each step: from emission reduction to reduced acid rain to reduced chemical damage.

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Wrap Up

In one sentence, what was the main idea of this lesson?