A strong base fully splits into hydroxide ions in water, pushing pH up fast and making the solution sharply caustic.
You’ve seen bases at work even if you didn’t call them that. Drain cleaner, oven cleaner, some lab reagents, and many industrial washes rely on compounds that crank up alkalinity. In chemistry terms, “strong” has a tight meaning: it’s about how completely a base reacts in water, not how dangerous it feels in your hand.
If you’re studying acid–base units, this one detail saves time. Once you know a base is strong, many problems turn into straightforward mole and concentration steps instead of equilibrium setups.
What Is a Strong Base in Chemistry?
In most introductory courses, a strong base is a base that reacts with water to completion. When it dissolves, it produces hydroxide ions (OH−) without leaving much of the base unreacted in solution. That “to completion” detail is the whole story behind the word strong.
Compare that with a weak base. A weak base dissolves and reacts only partway, so the solution contains a mix of base, its conjugate acid form, and some hydroxide ions. Weak bases still raise pH, but they do it in a limited, equilibrium-controlled way.
What “Strong” Refers To In Class Problems
Strength is about equilibrium position in water. Strong acids and bases sit far to the products side, so many calculations treat the reaction as finished.
Weak acids and bases sit partway. That’s when you set up an equilibrium expression and use a K value from a table.
Arrhenius, Brønsted–Lowry, And Lewis Views
Teachers may swap definitions depending on the unit:
- Arrhenius base: increases OH− concentration in water (common for strong bases in general chemistry).
- Brønsted–Lowry base: accepts a proton (H+), which can also lead to OH− formation in water.
- Lewis base: donates an electron pair (used in coordination chemistry and reaction mechanisms).
Most “strong base” lists you memorize come from the Arrhenius and Brønsted–Lowry angle: compounds that deliver OH− cleanly in water.
Strong Base In Chemistry: How It Behaves In Water
Drop sodium hydroxide into water and it dissociates: NaOH(s) → Na+(aq) + OH−(aq). The sodium ion is a spectator in acid–base terms. The hydroxide ion drives the base behavior.
For the strongest common bases, there’s no back reaction worth tracking in typical class settings. That lets you treat hydroxide concentration as coming straight from the amount dissolved.
Why Group 1 And Heavy Group 2 Hydroxides Make The List
Many strong bases are metal hydroxides. The ionic bond between the metal cation and hydroxide anion breaks apart well in water. Group 1 hydroxides (LiOH, NaOH, KOH, RbOH, CsOH) dissociate readily. Among Group 2, Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, and Ba(OH)2 are treated as strong bases in water, while their solubility varies.
Solubility and strength are not the same thing. A compound can be a strong base when dissolved, yet dissolve only a little. Calcium hydroxide is the classic case: the dissolved portion dissociates nearly fully, but only a limited amount dissolves at room temperature.
Strong Base Vs Concentrated Base
Students mix these up a lot. “Strong” describes dissociation behavior. “Concentrated” describes how much base is present per volume. You can have:
- a dilute strong base (low molarity NaOH),
- a concentrated weak base (high molarity ammonia solution),
- or a dilute weak base (low molarity NH3).
That distinction matters for pH, reaction outcomes, and safety labels.
How To Recognize A Strong Base Fast
In a worksheet or exam, recognition often beats derivation. These cues match standard gen-chem expectations.
Look For These Families
- Group 1 hydroxides: LiOH, NaOH, KOH, RbOH, CsOH.
- Heavier Group 2 hydroxides: Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, Ba(OH)2.
- Alkoxide bases (in non-aqueous contexts): RO− salts like sodium ethoxide can act as strong bases, but their behavior depends on solvent and water content.
In water-focused problems, teachers nearly always mean the first two bullets.
Watch Out For Carbonates And Bicarbonates
Carbonate (CO32−) and bicarbonate (HCO3−) raise pH, but they do it through equilibria. They’re bases, but not strong bases in water. In pH calculations, you treat them like weak bases with K values, not like fully dissociated hydroxides.
Ammonia Is A Base, Not A Strong Base
NH3 accepts a proton from water: NH3 + H2O ⇌ NH4+ + OH−. The reaction sits partway, so you get some OH−, not a full conversion. That’s why ammonia has a base dissociation constant (Kb) in tables.
What A Strong Base Does In Reactions
Once you know [OH−] rises sharply, many patterns fall into place. Strong bases drive neutralization, shift equilibria, and change what species remain after a reaction.
Neutralization With Acids
With strong acids, neutralization is straightforward: H+ + OH− → H2O. The remaining ions form a salt. If amounts match, the final solution can land near pH 7 for strong acid–strong base mixes.
With weak acids, the final pH can land above 7 because the conjugate base remains and reacts with water.
“Two Hydroxides Per Mole” Traps
For Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, and Ba(OH)2, each formula unit supplies two hydroxide ions when it dissolves. In concentration steps, that means:
- 0.010 M Ba(OH)2 gives 0.020 M OH− in solution (for the dissolved portion).
Table: Common Strong Bases And How They Show Up
Memorizing lists gets easier when each item has a clear association. The table below ties names to formulas and typical settings where students meet them.
| Base (Name) | Formula | Where You See It |
|---|---|---|
| Lithium hydroxide | LiOH | Lab reagents; CO2 scrubbing cartridges |
| Sodium hydroxide | NaOH | Drain/oven cleaners; titrations; soap making |
| Potassium hydroxide | KOH | Electrolytes; biodiesel prep; lab base stock |
| Rubidium hydroxide | RbOH | Specialty inorganic chemistry |
| Cesium hydroxide | CsOH | Specialty synthesis; high-pH reactions |
| Calcium hydroxide | Ca(OH)2 | Limewater tests; water treatment; mortar |
| Strontium hydroxide | Sr(OH)2 | Specialty synthesis; strong base examples |
| Barium hydroxide | Ba(OH)2 | Strong base titrations; sulfate test chemistry |
If you want a formal definition of “base” used across chemistry, the IUPAC Gold Book entry for “base” is a solid reference point for classroom wording.
How pH And pOH Work With Strong Bases
Once you have [OH−], the rest is log math.
Step Pattern For Water-Based Problems
- Convert grams to moles if needed.
- Find molarity of the base in liters of solution.
- Multiply by the number of OH− per formula unit (1 for NaOH, 2 for Ba(OH)2).
- Compute pOH = −log[OH−].
- Compute pH = 14.00 − pOH (at 25°C).
That last step uses the relationship pH + pOH = 14.00 at 25°C. Some courses adjust the constant for temperature, but most general problems use 14.00 unless told otherwise.
What Changes In Dilution
Dilution changes concentration, not moles. Track it with M1V1 = M2V2 for hydroxide, then convert to pOH and pH.
Table: Quick Decision Checks For Strong-Base Questions
When you’re stuck, use these checks to decide which tool to use: dissociation logic, equilibrium math, or solubility rules.
| Question Type | Fast Check | What To Do Next |
|---|---|---|
| pH from NaOH or KOH | Base is Group 1 hydroxide | Treat [OH−] as equal to base molarity |
| pH from Ba(OH)2 | Two OH− per unit | Double the dissolved molarity to get [OH−] |
| pH from NH3 | Ammonia is weak base | Set up Kb equilibrium table |
| pH from Na2CO3 | Carbonate is weak base | Use K values; expect buffered behavior |
| Mixing strong acid + strong base | Neutralization goes to water | Do mole subtraction, then pH from leftover H+ or OH− |
| Mixing weak acid + strong base | Conjugate base remains | After neutralization, treat as buffer or hydrolysis problem |
| Ca(OH)2 in water | Strong base, limited solubility | Use solubility (or Ksp) data if provided |
| Safety or handling question | Check official hazard and first-aid info | Use a trusted chemical database before lab work |
For lab safety summaries and hazard classifications, the PubChem record for sodium hydroxide is a reliable starting point.
Mistakes Students Make With Strong Bases
Strong-base questions look simple, so small slips cost points. These errors show up often.
Mixing Up Strength With pH
A weak base can still reach a high pH if the solution is concentrated enough. A strong base can land at a modest pH if it’s dilute. Strength is about reaction completeness, not the pH number by itself.
Forgetting The Stoichiometry In Neutralization
In a titration, moles matter first. You subtract moles of acid and base based on the balanced reaction, then convert what’s left into concentration. Many students jump straight to pH formulas and skip the mole bookkeeping.
Ignoring Solubility Limits
Calcium hydroxide is treated as a strong base in water, but you can’t assume any chosen mass dissolves. If the problem mentions “saturated” Ca(OH)2 or gives Ksp, that’s your cue to use solubility math before pH math.
Assuming All “Basic” Salts Act Like Strong Bases
Sodium acetate, sodium carbonate, and sodium fluoride can raise pH, but they do it by hydrolysis, not by releasing OH− directly as an ionic hydroxide. That changes the math and the expected pH.
Practical Notes For Labs And Home Products
Strong bases show up in cleaners because hydroxide breaks down fats and proteins. The flip side is caustic burns, so use goggles, gloves, slow additions to water, and clear labels.
Mini Checklist For Exams
- Is it a Group 1 hydroxide, Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, or Ba(OH)2? Treat as strong base when dissolved.
- Does the formula contain two OH−? Double the hydroxide count.
- Does the base come from ammonia, carbonate, acetate, or fluoride? Expect equilibrium steps.
- Is the word “saturated” present? Check solubility or Ksp first.
- For mixtures: do moles and stoichiometry before pH logs.
References & Sources
- IUPAC.“Base (IUPAC Gold Book).”Defines the term “base” and related acid–base language used in chemistry.
- PubChem (NIH/NLM).“Sodium Hydroxide Compound Summary.”Lists identifiers and safety-related information used for handling common hydroxides.